Australia Post has successfully field-trialed the use of
drones to deliver small packages, clearing the way for test deliveries
to customer homes later this year.
The state-owned corporation said the drones will be used for
the delivery of online shopping parcels and time-sensitive items such
as medication.
"We will put this innovative technology through its paces
over the coming weeks and months to understand what it can deliver, how
far it can travel, and ultimately, how our customers could receive a
parcel," Australia Post Managing Director Ahmed Fahour said.
Postal services around the world are facing dramatic
declines in their core letter-delivery business as customers turn to the
internet for all forms of correspondence from billing to greeting
cards.
While Australia Post is the first Australian company to get
into the area of drone delivery, in the United States online retailer
Amazon unveiled a drone delivery prototype in November, joining
competitors GOOGL and Wal-Mart who are also looking into the technology.
.
Australia's vast interior is one of the most sparsely populated in
the world, but drone delivery is unlikely to penetrate beyond the major
cities: Amazon's prototype last year managed to fly a package only 15
miles (24 kms).
Australia Post last year posted a A$222 million ($171
million) loss, the company's first full-year loss posting in over 30
years and dramatic down-turn from a A$116.2 million ($89.72 million)
profit in 2014. The company attributed some of the loss to a 10.3 per
cent fall in the use of stamped letters.
Post a Comment