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Meet the high-flying Aussies transforming medical supply delivery

What’s that in the sky? It’s not a bird or a plane – it's innovative drone technology developed right here in Australia, delivering life-saving supplies worldwide.

Eric Peck and Josh Tepper are two Aussies who have developed a sustainable, reliable and scalable solution for the delivery of medical supplies.

Eric Peck spent nine years as an Air Force pilot. But it’s through medical drone logistics company Swoop Aero that he’s making a real difference in the air.

According to the World Health Organisation, over half the world’s population doesn’t have access to essential health services. Here in our own backyard, the population in rural and remote areas have a shorter life expectancy than those in metro areas, likely due to poor access to health services.

“Transporting time-sensitive samples and medications is a huge challenge for healthcare providers,” Eric says. “When you need to pick something up really quickly, it can be difficult to mobilise vehicles and travel hundreds of kilometres, especially if roads are poor.” 

An innovative solution 

At a 2017 networking event, Eric and Swoop Aero co-founder Josh Tepper were asked if drones could deliver chemotherapy medication to rural Australia. The tough question got them thinking.

“With our backgrounds in aviation and robotics, we knew it was technically possible to use a drone to move a kilo of medication 100 kilometres and fly back,” Eric says. “But we started talking about what a scalable system that could do that every day would look like.”

The answer was to build a new end-to-end logistics system from scratch. That August, Eric and Josh formed Swoop Aero.

The company took off in 2018 when the Vanuatu Government and UNICEF awarded it the world’s first competitive tender for medical drone delivery to supply aid to remote islands in Vanuatu.

Swoop Aero drone flying over healthcare clinic

Swoop access for all 

Today, Swoop Aero drones can deliver up to three kilograms of medical supplies – including cold chain vaccines, medicine, samples and other equipment.

Customers can opt-in and schedule deliveries through their medical services provider. They are told when and where the drone will land with supplies via a telehealth consultation or a messaging service like WhatsApp.

 

In 2020, Swoop Aero delivered 32,000 vials of vaccine across three countries to more than 100 healthcare centres and helped process 50,000 HIV testing samples.

 

 

For deliveries, the drones land so users can retrieve the supplies. Then they press a button to send the drone back. The aircraft are housed at hospitals, chemists and other medical supply locations, where they recharge and await packing for their next mission.

An extraordinary ecosystem  

Eric says the Swoop Aero system is unique. “We maintain a digital twin of the entire operation that’s like a shadow of the aircraft,” he says. “With the data from the on-board computers and sensors, we can identify how well systems are working.”

He says Swoop Aero acts as its own ecosystem – every piece of hardware and software is constantly feeding information back and forth in real time. This gives the Swoop team up-to-date oversight of key data including battery power, delivery times, airworthiness and fleet efficiency.

Machine learning algorithms dissect this data and produce insights so the team can predict problems, analyse performance and ensure drones remain ready for delivery.

“People had tried to turn remote-controlled drones into delivery drones,” Eric says. “But there was a general lack of aviation knowledge, and they were trying to use of off-the-shelf, commercialised and standardised technology to create a general solution. Applying traditional drone systems as solutions to delivery challenges meant their tech was failing.

“By building a new integrated system we made it cheaper, more reliable and more sustainable.”
Swoop Aero drones lined up on ground

Flying towards net zero

Sustainability is a priority for Swoop Aero. The company’s Port Melbourne headquarters is powered by green energy, which keeps the company carbon neutral at the manufacturing level.

Drone bodies are 3D printed, with unused printing material returned to suppliers and recycled into more usable material. Most drone components are also recycled when the aircraft are decommissioned. And Swoop Aero makes rechargeable torches using degraded drone batteries, distributing them to those in remote areas overseas.

 

The aircrafts are electrically powered, and where possible Swoop uses solar power to recharge. But Eric says even traditional charging still causes little environmental stress.

 

“Even if you used a normal power point from a coal-fired power station to recharge an aircraft, the energy used to fly 100km, make a drop and fly back would emit less carbon overall than a person riding a bike that same distance.”

Good for people, good for the planet 

And all Swoop’s operations in Africa and Vanuatu are completely off-grid, making them effectively carbon neutral.

In the fight to get carbon emissions net zero around the world, Eric says transport is an area to target.

“There is a lot of carbon emission in rural areas,” he says. “If we can take vehicles off the road by not making people drive hundreds of kilometres for supplies, that’s huge. The same goes for cities – taking cars off the road removes emissions from those vehicles and reduces traffic so the whole network is more efficient.”

Two medical staff standing next to grounded Swoop Aero drone

Young Aussie innovators

Eric and Josh have built a young team at Swoop Aero inspired by other innovative thinkers.

“The average age of the Apollo 13 mission was under 30, and they did something nobody thought was possible,” Eric says. “SpaceX is the same. This group of young, optimistic people isn’t constrained by tradition.”

He says proving doubters wrong helps fuel Swoop Aero.
“The Australian Civil Aviation Safety Authority told us we couldn’t do drone delivery unless we were a billion-dollar company,” Eric says.

 

“Young people around Australia are coming together to do the impossible, whether it’s drone delivery like ours or working toward net zero in other ways.”

 

Eric, Josh and their young team plan to continue developing new solutions for old supply chain problems.

“We’re doing something really great for the world with this technology, and it makes sense. That’s what motivates us.

“Technology is how we’re going to achieve a carbon neutral future.”

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