Could drones be the highways of the future?
Going off-road used
to mean tearing up dirt tracks in a powerful four-by-four or gigantic monster
truck.
For the ambitious entrepreneurs at Matternet however, the
term has come to comprise something more subtle and, potentially, revolutionary.
For the past 18 months the tech start-up has been working
towards creating a roving network of automated drones that will help connect
rural and under-developed areas with little or no access to existing road or
highway systems.
While the idea may sound far-fetched to those unfamiliar
with the latest in civilian drone technology, preliminary vehicle testing has
already taken place.
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"The easiest way to describe what we are doing is to
compare how mobile telephony has taken off in the developing world," said
Matternet founder and CEO, Andreas Raptopoulos.
"(We want) to leapfrog the traditional modes of
transportation infrastructure in a similar way and bring items through these
unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to people who may otherwise be cut off or
isolated," he added.
A network of drones
The idea stems from when Raptopoulos led a research group
including the company's three other co-founders at the Singularity University
in Silicon Valley.
They envisioned employing a fleet of drones with a two
kilogram payload capacity and a six mile flight-range.
These automated vehicles would be complimented on the ground
by a vast network of strategically positioned hubs, enabling drones to recharge
their batteries every few miles before continuing to the next station (where
the recharging process is repeated) or final destination.
Control of the drones and the assignment of packages for
delivery would eventually be handled by an automated operating system. Orders
or requests could then be placed and paid for by cell phone.
The potential applications, Raptopoulos explained, include
delivery of medicines to disconnected areas, enabling farmers to supply
products directly to customers and providing vital materials to areas cut off
by natural disasters.
In the future, he adds, the concept could also be adapted to
enhance the transport or distribution systems of large cities.
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So far, Matternet have reached the stage of conducting
initial trials of "quadrocopter" drones, which took place in Haiti
and the Dominican Republic last year.
While happy with the results, Raptopolous believes the
concept needs more testing before commercial or civilian deployment can be
considered.
But the fledgling outfit are not alone in their ambitious
endeavors.
Internet of actual things
Aria (Autonomous Roadless Intelligent Array) -- set up by
students from the same Singularity University class but concentrating more on
developing an open source system and ground network -- hopes to bring its
version of the technology to this year's Burning Man festival in Nevada.
It's exploring ways to deliver locally sourced fruit and
vegetables via drone in Auckland, New Zealand.
According to Aria co-founder, Arturo Pelayo, a
hyper-connected AUV network creates the possibility of a physical delivery
system so dense and interconnected that is in effect an "analogue
internet."
"On the internet you send digital packages. On the
analogue internet you are still sending packages but these are physical,"
he said.
"We see the opportunity to create these very flexible
networks serviced by these systems and ground hubs -- which could even be
something as basic as a disused shipping container -- over very large
areas," he added.
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As the technology develops further, Pelayo believes they
will overcome the drones' principle limitations -- namely the short distances
they can travel and small weight they are currently able to carry.
He also highlights cost benefits as a significant factor in
making the technology attractive to potential users.
Counting the cost
Raptopolous agrees and points to a Matternet case study of
the Maseru district of Lesotho, which put the price of a network of 50
base-stations and 150 drones at just $900,000 -- comparing favorably against $1
million for a two kilometer, one-lane road.
But while enthusiastic about these figures Raptopolous
emphasizes that he doesn't see drones replacing roads or highways any time
soon.
Roads, after all, still carry the obvious benefit of being
able to transport people and cater for much larger and heavier loads.
"The idea of Matternet is not to replace systems where
they work well but really to compliment them," he said. "We initially
see these devices coming in where existing systems break (like in a natural
disaster) or where there is a chance to improve existing infrastructure,"
External factors such as how small drones perform in bad
weather, how they interact with other aircraft as well as public perceptions of
devices best known for their operation in a military theater will also have to
be overcome, he admits.


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