UAM (Urban Air Mobility) and AAM (Advanced Air Mobility) promise a revolution in faster, cleaner, more integrated transportation.
As with any revolutionary change, there are challenges to overcome before the UAM dream becomes a reality. Keeping passengers and people on the ground safe, delivering enough sustainable power to carry the required payload, creating the necessary infrastructure and appropriate regulatory frameworks are just a few.
While UAM has been taking its first tentative steps, the use of drones in logistics has been quietly maturing. Much of its growth has been in areas that may be less visible - delivering drugs in Africa more than parcels in Paris - so it’s easy to underestimate the maturity of the logistics drone market. It is this maturity and the learnings that created it which could help address some of the challenges facing UAM.
In this post, I explore how far drone use in logistics has laid the foundations for UAM and highlight some of the remaining challenges.