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Amazon has a new drone for 30-minute urban deliveries

As Amazon prepares to debut its long-delayed Prime Air drone delivery service, it's also showing off a smaller, quieter drone that will be ready in 2024 and could be making regular deliveries in major cities by the end of the decade.

Why it matters: Consumers want their stuff fast, and under Amazon founder Jeff Bezos' vision, they could get it delivered in as little as 30 minutes while helping the environment by taking CO2-emitting trucks off the street.


  • But a host of technical and regulatory hurdles stand in the way, which is why drone deliveries in the U.S. are progressing slowly.

Driving the news: Amazon showed off its next-generation drone at a recent event near Boston to highlight the future of delivery.

  • The 80-pound hexagon-shaped aircraft, about 5½ feet in diameter, is nimble enough to make deliveries in highly populated areas such as Boston, Atlanta and Seattle.
  • It'll be more capable and less intrusive than the model Amazon is using in its Prime Air service, which will begin in two markets — Lockeford, California, and College Station, Texas — in the coming weeks.
  • By the end of the decade, the company's goal is to deliver 500 million packages a year by drone in cities, Amazon Prime Air vice president David Carbon told reporters.

Details: The new aircraft, dubbed MK30, has a longer range and can fly in more types of weather — including light rain — than the drone it'll use in the near term.

  • It also has new "sense-and-avoid" safety features that allow it to operate at greater distances while skirting other aircraft, people, pets and obstacles.
  • Custom-designed propellers reduce the perceived noise by 25%, Amazon said.
  • Thousands of items could be eligible for drone delivery as long as they fit in one box and weigh less than 5 pounds total.

Zoom out: Amazon has been pursuing drone delivery for nearly a decade, but the program has been beset by delays and internal strife, as Bloomberg reported earlier this year.

  • It's lagging behind Walmart, which says it's expanding its DroneUp delivery network to 34 sites in six states.
  • Other players, including Zipline and Google-owned Wing, have also begun drone deliveries for hospitals and retail partners such as Walgreens.

How it works: I donned virtual reality goggles at a recent Amazon media event to see how the service would work:

  • An Amazon employee loads a shoebox-shaped package into the drone and secures it before stepping away.
  • The drone takes off vertically, using six propellers.
  • Once in the air, the drone rotates to a forward position and flies at up to 50 mph.
  • Upon arrival, the drone descends, scans the area to make sure it's clear, then drops the box from a height of about 12 feet.

Of note: Amazon says that special sturdy packaging will protect fragile purchases. But other drone delivery services lower the bundle with a tether or parachute.

  • Either way, customers aren't allowed to stand under the drone.

What's next: There's still a lot of work to be done before drones start zipping around major cities.

  • The Federal Aviation Administration needs to issue new rules that'll let drones fly beyond the visual line of sight of the operator.
  • And new traffic management technologies still under development need to be finalized to ensure drones don't crash into one another.
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