Global Drone Doorstep Deliveries Market Report 2021: Technology is NOT Living up to the Hype - ResearchAndMarkets.com

DUBLIN--()--The "Drone Doorstep Deliveries - Technology is NOT Living up to the Hype" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

With the strong expansion of online retail during the last decade, the biggest firms involved in the online retail value chain have begun to focus on improving their efficiency by perfecting their logistics chains.

Especially, the tasks of handling and shipping, which have been seen as both a cost-burden and inhibitor for the growth of online retail, have urged online retailers and postage companies to innovate, finding new, more efficient ways to perform them.

The technological evolution in the field of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) has pushed the idea of shipping goods as one of their potential uses.

Moreover, the significant investment in drones has been based on the ambitious assumptions that drones can be more efficient, delivering at considerably lower costs, higher speed, and with a lower carbon footprint than conventional deliveries with a van and a driver. Nonetheless, the economics of delivery services are too complex to provide a clear cost advantage to drone deliveries.

Key Highlights

  • The main developers of drone delivery services worldwide, which include Amazon, Google, FedEx, UPS, DHL, Rakuten and JD.com, have drone delivery operations up and running, but their scale remains limited to the pilot stage due to lengthy and strict regulatory processes or in other cases, it is focused only on certain last-mile delivery areas where drone delivery is the last option. In both cases, online retailer and delivery providers appear to be either far from widely adopting drone deliveries, or they do not even aim for it.
  • In fact, it is safe to say that the aspirations for revolutionizing the future of logistics with drone deliveries, especially in urban centers, has turned into the hype; that is because these claims cannot be realized at present given regulatory hurdles and many technical issues that have not been worked out or have been overlooked so that the potential of drones for logistics services has not been realistically assessed.
  • With the strong expansion of online retail during the last decade, the biggest firms involved in the online retail value chain begun to focus on improving their efficiency by perfecting their logistics chains. Especially, the tasks of handling and shipping, which have been seen as both a cost-burden and inhibitor for the growth of online retail, have urged online retailers and postage companies to innovate, finding new, more efficient ways to perform them.

Scope

  • Learn how drones are being used in business
  • Understand what the hopes for drone deliveries are
  • See how some of these expectations cannot be met
  • Understand what solutions are likely in future

Reasons to Buy

  • What is the hope for drones in business?
  • What are the main problems with drones and the expectations of them?
  • How can progress be made without drone solutions?

Key Topics Covered:

1. OVERVIEW

1.1. Catalyst

1.2. Summary

2. THE RATIONALE BEHIND THE DRONE DELIVERY HYPE

2.1. Ambitions for wide adoption of drone deliveries are biased on the need to achieve cost-savings

2.1.1. The cost advantage of drone deliveries is overestimated

2.1.2. A range bias overestimates drone delivery potential

3. DRONE SERVICE DEVELOPMENTS ARE FAR FROM WIDE ADOPTION

3.1. Drone delivery services still at pilot stage

3.1.1. Google's Wing and FedEx

3.1.2. UPS Flight Forward

3.1.3. DHL Express and Parcelcopter drone service

3.1.4. Japanese Rakuten and China's JD.com and parcel drone delivery service

4. SLOW REGULATORY PROGRESS AND UNSOLVED TECHNICAL ISSUES PROVE DRONES' LIMITED POTENTIAL

4.1. Slow progress on meeting regulation requirements continue to hinder wide deployment of drones

4.2. Lack of consistency on fundamental navigation solutions

4.3. Not every day is a sunny day for drones

4.4. Consumers' concerns over reliability and safety of drones are valid

4.4.1. Accessibility of delivery zones and security risks, a major drawback

4.4.2. Safety risks to increase at large scale operation

4.4.3. Noise pollution, a crucial factor overlooked

4.5. The future of delivery services does not lie on air, but only for a few exceptions

5. APPENDIX

List of Figures

  • Amazon Prime Air drone
  • Google's Wing drone
  • UPS Flight Forward drones
  • DHL Parcelcopter drones
  • Rakuten's Tenku drone

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/i2olem

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Contacts

ResearchAndMarkets.com
Laura Wood, Senior Press Manager
press@researchandmarkets.com

For E.S.T Office Hours Call 1-917-300-0470
For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call 1-800-526-8630
For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900