How Logistics Drones are Blazing a Trail for Urban Air Mobility    

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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.

Logistics Drones – a Hidden Revolution?

Eight years ago, it looked like drone-based delivery could be commonplace in at least some North American and European urban areas by 2021, yet today, save for a few trial schemes, the skies remain relatively drone-free. A  TIME Magazine article from November 2021 highlights some reasons why Amazon’s Prime Air service rollout is taking longer than expected. Other services have faced similar challenges.  

Regulatory approvals have taken time, not helped by some well-publicised drone incursions, but the last three years have seen significant FAA approvals, including for Google and Amazon to operate drone services, so the future is getting much closer.

Meanwhile, much of the logistics drone revolution has been happening away from the world of online retail delivery.

In areas like East Africa, the different infrastructure challenges and the demand for effective, rapid supply chains into remote locations for functions like medication delivery has driven fast-track approvals and more progress.

Sparsely populated areas often lack the infrastructure for traditional delivery modes, and there are fewer safety concerns where drones can operate hub to hub without overflying populated areas. The COVID pandemic has added a further driver with the need to deliver more vaccines and other medical supplies.

The African experience is creating transferable capabilities for other markets.

Zipline is one  example of a company now growing its presence in the US market, while Wingcopter, one of the biggest logistics companies in Europe, has been delivering drone successes in areas as diverse as medical supplies delivery in Vanuatu, wildlife conservation in Canada, and volcanologcal research in Italy.

These developments, along with continuing technological innovation and ever-growing customer demand for rapid last-mile delivery, is leading analysts to speak with more assurance about drones as the future of parcel delivery, and to project a CAGR of 21% for drone transportation and logistics from 2020-2027, to reach US$45.5 Billion by 2027.

What the Logistics Drone Revolution Means for UAM

It’s clearly a big step up from drones carrying parcels to drones carrying people.

There is an extra dimension around safety, power, weight, infrastructure, regulation, cost and customer acceptance in moving from logistics drones to UAM. Add the long-term economic impact of the COVID pandemic and other geo-political upheavals, and it’s not surprising that some observers see the UAM taking a while to take off.

Yet logistics drones have created a useful foundation for UAM. Extending regulatory frameworks from logistics drones to UAM may still be a massive task, but at least those frameworks exist.

While designing an autonomous air vehicle is far more complex than designing a logistics drone, they also have many design factors in common.

Sustainability is a shared challenge for the whole transportation sector. Minimizing the environmental footprint of a drone throughout its lifecycle, notably its power source and its impact on rare resources, is a specific challenge for logistics and UAM, but the automobile and general aerospace industry face similar sustainability challenges.

Designing the infrastructure for UAM can build on what has been learned with logistics drones, recognizing there is a whole added dimension around handling passengers and building VTOL hubs, to be managed as part of a wider integrated transport architecture.

The UAM Propulsion Challenge

Propulsion is perhaps the biggest single area where UAM needs to innovate.

The higher payloads involved in UAM versus logistics drones mean that energy density – the amount of energy that can be stored in the propulsion system – is key.

Anyone who has followed the race between electric automobile manufacturers to increase range between charges will appreciate the level of focus on increasing the energy density of battery propulsion systems.

At the same time, green hydrogen or fuel cells, could offer viable alternatives for UAM propulsion.

Whether the sustainable UAM propulsion solution is battery or hydrogen, it remains one of the key questions for the sector to address, one I will explore further in a future article.

Henkel’s Role in the UAM Revolution

Delivering logistics drone capability has seen close collaboration across industries and regulators, and UAM requires the same level of co-operation.

Henkel’s position as a market leading provider of materials and bonding solutions means we have a major part to play.

From innovative bonding solutions, to technologies to prevent uncontained thermal runaway in electric vehicle batteries and support heat dissipation in miniturized electrical components, Henkel is already contributing, and we have the expertise and experience to do much more.

The use of drones in logistics delivers tangible and growing benefits, addressing challenges that previously existing technologies could not tackle, and laying some of the key operational and regulatory foundations for UAM.

UAM is building on these while tackling its own unique challenges in areas like propulsion, with ongoing development in battery technology capability alongside innovation in alternatives such as fuel cells.

Here at Henkel we are excited to be playing our part in the collaboration that is essential to deliver the dream of UAM, by developing solutions to meet some of its key challenges.

What Next?

To learn more about how Henkel’s role in the UAM revolution, and to continue the conversation, sign up for our upcoming Expert Talk.

About the Author

Mareike Noack

Mareike is responsible for managing the global market segment of the Urban and Advanced Air Mobility at Henkel. She holds a Master in Science and has a technical background. Prior to her current position, Mareike worked in product development for the Aerospace and Electronics Industry as the technical lead for different projects. Her focus topics were lightweight materials with FST characteristics for supporting health & safety for the end-customer and reducing CO2/ energy at use-phase.

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