Google’s drone delivery project in Canberra is given the gre…

Updated

April 09, 2019 11:46:26

It’s official: Google will open its world-first drone delivery business in Canberra’s north, now that the aviation authority has given formal approval to the project.

Key points:

  • Initially only a handful of Canberra suburbs will be covered by Google’s drone delivery service
  • Google’s Mitchell depot will use quieter drones to deliver goods
  • Twelve local businesses have already signed up to be involved

Project Wing, run by Google’s parent company Alphabet, has been trialling delivering burritos, coffee and medication by drone in a suburb on the fringes of Canberra for a year.

For months, a depot in Canberra’s industrial suburb of Mitchell — with roller doors built into its second storey — has sat waiting for approval for its dozens of drones to take flight.

The air safety regulator CASA needed to consider whether to grant the same safety exemptions given to Google in its trial in Bonython in Canberra’s south, such as allowing drones to fly closer to people than usual.

CASA spokesman Peter Gibson this morning told ABC Radio Canberra that approval had been given.

“We’ve gone through all the thorough safety assessment we did for the Bonython operation, we’ve done that now for Mitchell and surrounding suburbs. We’ll issue the appropriate permissions for those to go ahead,” Mr Gibson said.

He indicated Project Wing would have the same exemptions.

“Everyone can rest assured from a safety perspective it will operate very, very well, just as it did down at Bonython,” he said.

Quieter drones employed for Mitchell operation

The year-long Bonython trial saw more than a thousand deliveries without a safety incident.

But it caused upset among locals, who said the noise of the drones drove them to tears.

The drones were below legal noise limits, but Project Wing has since developed a new, quieter, model for its Mitchell operation.

A local inquiry into drone delivery has heard no agency currently has remit to handle noise issues — CASA and the ACT Government both denied they had jurisdiction to manage noise issues.

Five suburbs to receive service

The new Mitchell operation will initially deliver goods from a dozen local businesses to five suburbs in Gungahlin, in Canberra’s north.

The head of Project Wing previously said the depot was ready to operate, but was waiting for approval.

The company has been contacted for comment.

Topics:

pollution,

science-and-technology,

computers-and-technology,

safety,

canberra-2600,

act

First posted

April 09, 2019 10:40:45

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