Game of Drones: The Unmanned Future of The Industry
By OEM Update Editorial October 7, 2020 3:32 pm IST
This article explains how India’s drone story is ready to take off and how India can fly high with drone technology.
Unmanned aerial vehicles or UAVs – also known as drones – have long been welcomed across industries. Businesses have realised that drones have multiple commercial applications, some of which go beyond basic surveillance, photography, or videos, and they are already using them to transform daily work in some industries.
Drones powering last-mile delivery is a predictable part of the future. Some of the most exciting potential applications come from the use of drones in the delivery of essential, healthcare and medical deliveries at customers doorsteps – the hospitals in remote areas in the country which are deprived of medical amenities will get quick and timely assistance through drones.
Experts have indicated that there are two verticals that would be the showstopper of drone industry – Delivery and Advanced Air Mobility. The modern healthcare system represents some of the greatest achievements of the human intellect to improve the quality of people’s lives. Yet, in this modern age, many people in rural and underdeveloped quarters of the world still lack access to basic healthcare. Closing these gaps has gained a new urgency during the current pandemic, which has made clear how interconnected all of our health outcomes are.
In the current scenario, governments and large private companies like Dunzo, Skye Air and others are exploring opportunities drones offer in terms of medical, package and food deliveries. There are many hospitals who urgently need blood for patients and cannot get it timely from the blood banks. The irony of the situation is that a pizza reaches in 30 minutes but medical supplies take hours and days.
However, with an advent of technologies, drones are making it possible to deliver emergency medical supplies (blood packets, vaccines, long tail medics) to remote healthcare centers. With the use of drones, within an area of 100-150 kms, the deliveries are now possible. Frontline workers can easily place orders by text message or call and promptly receive their deliveries in 30 minutes or less. These specialised drones could fly into remote areas with supplies that are tailored for such situations. Deliveries can be made in multiple ways, however the most common way being followed includes land and delivery through string mechanism.
Drones could also be used for the speedy delivery of donated organs, thereby avoiding the expense of hiring air transport and dodging the traffic thereby potentially saving more lives. Therefore, it’s high time we think of a future where packages would reach in minutes instead of days.
Authored by:Ankit Kumar,
Founder & Managing Partner, AGI
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