Drone company trounces Uber Eats with food delivery firsts in ACT, Qld

Uber Eats has been talking up drone delivery for years but another company is trouncing it with world firsts in Australia.

Drones look set to become a big part of the booming food delivery business, with Vietnamese delectables now taking to Australian skies.

Roll’d Vietnamese announced on Thursday it had teamed up with Wing, a subsidiary of Google’s parent company Alphabet, to deliver its banh mi (baguettes), bao (steamed buns), rice paper rolls and the like via drones in Logan, Queensland and Gungahlin, Canberra.

“With efficient delivery within minutes, Roll’d orders can be placed via the Wing app and will be delivered by a remotely piloted custom drone to customers within a 10km radius of the delivery site,” the chain said in a statement.

In a world first, Wing launched in Canberra in 2019 and is now delivering coffee, curries, burgers, ice cream, groceries, office supplies, pharmacy items and even pet treats to homes and commercial businesses across Crace, Franklin, Harrison, Palmerston, Mitchell and Gungahlin.

In another world first in August last year, Wing began operating a drone delivery “nest” on the rooftop of Grand Plaza in Logan, sending out goods on-demand from a range of businesses at the shopping centre to surrounding suburbs.

Wing says the business took off last year as the pandemic raged on, with deliveries rocketing more than 600 per cent compared to 2020.

“Wing made more than 100,000 drone deliveries in Australia in 2021, and we’re looking forward to continuing this growth, by expanding our service to more customers and businesses in 2022,” spokesman Jesse Suskin said.

Earlier this month, Singapore-based strategy and economic advisory company AlphaBeta estimated drone delivery had the potential to boost retail sales in Australia by $2.2bn by 2030.

AlphaBeta also says the technology is expected to slash delivery costs for businesses by up to $800m per year by the end of this decade, with delivery costs for takeaway food to fall in the long term by up to 80-90 per cent.

It also said drone deliveries could play a big role in reducing traffic congestion, reducing annual carbon emissions by 500,000-550,000 tonnes, “equivalent to the carbon storage of 16-18 million trees”.

But it’s clearly not an easy business, with Wing saying last year’s success came after a decade of development, testing and trials.

In 2013, Amazon chief Jeff Bezos announced with great fanfare that the Amazon Prime Air drone delivery service could be ready in “four or five years” but so far, that hasn’t eventuated.

Food delivery giant Uber Eats in 2016 held a “VIP BBQ” publicity stunt in Dallas whereby hundreds of people were meant to be delivered brisket sandwiches, mac and cheese and the like via drone, but it was deemed a disaster and even an “epic fail” by the restaurant involved.

Things started to look better in 2019 when it unveiled a new delivery drone design and started testing them with a view to launch the service in San Diego in 2020.

Originally published as Drone company in Google stable leaves Uber Eats in dust with food delivery firsts in ACT, Qld

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