Matternet is positioning itself for rapid expansion in drone delivery as the regulatory framework for beyond visual line of sight (BVLOS) operations in the U.S. nears completion, founder and CEO Andreas Raptopoulos said in an interview.
Story Credit: Ben Goldstein
Image Credit: Matternet
aviationweek.com
Matternet is positioning itself for rapid expansion in drone delivery as the regulatory framework for beyond visual line of sight (BVLOS) operations in the U.S. nears completion, founder and CEO Andreas Raptopoulos said in an interview.
The Mountain View, California-based company, which recently launched medical drone delivery operations in central London for the UK National Health Service, is betting that a combination of FAA certification, automated ground infrastructure and expanding partnerships will allow drone delivery to scale beyond niche pilot projects into broader commercial use.
Matternet remains the only drone delivery company to secure FAA type certification for its delivery drone, the M2 quadcopter, as well as a production certificate enabling it to manufacture systems in-house. Raptopoulos said the certification provides a major advantage as the company works with large enterprise customers and regulators globally.
“When someone is considering working with Matternet, they know that we’ve hit the highest level of certification and safety,” he said. “For us, certification is core to our business model.”
Unlike some competitors that are pursuing exemptions or other special regulatory pathways to operate their own proprietary delivery networks, Matternet sees certification as key to its strategy of supplying drone delivery systems to large enterprise and logistics partners, which Raptopoulos says require standardized, regulator-approved products.
Matternet’s latest expansion into the UK builds on earlier healthcare operations in Switzerland and the U.S. Under a partnership with healthcare logistics specialist Apian, Matternet’s M2 drones are transporting diagnostic samples, laboratory specimens and pharmaceuticals between hospital campuses in central London. The company’s drone delivery platform is also used by UPS Flight Forward for healthcare delivery operations in the U.S.
Raptopoulos said healthcare remains one of the most attractive near-term markets for drone delivery because of the operational urgency and higher-value economics associated with medical logistics.
“When you’re delivering something in healthcare, it really has the potential of changing patient outcomes,” he said, adding that healthcare delivery also tends to support stronger unit economics than lower-margin consumer deliveries.
Matternet believes drone delivery in healthcare will initially focus on business-to-business operations connecting hospitals, laboratories and pharmacies, before eventually expanding into home delivery of pharmaceuticals and medical products.
At the same time, the company sees consumer delivery eventually becoming the largest segment of the market as retailers and logistics providers expand operations under an evolving BVLOS regulatory framework. Through a partnership with fast food chain Dave’s Hot Chicken, the company delivers meals directly to consumers’ doorsteps in California.
Raptopoulos estimated current U.S. drone delivery activity totals roughly 3,000-5,000 deliveries per day industrywide, but argued that figure could grow to millions of daily deliveries by the end of the decade as companies including Amazon and Walmart scale operations.
“We now have a straight line to that growth,” he said. “I think 2026 is an inflection year for drones in the U.S. because of the regulatory changes around BVLOS…The majority of volume is going to be in consumer delivery.”
A major part of Matternet’s strategy is reducing the operational complexity associated with drone delivery networks. Instead of large, centralized hubs, the company has developed automated “micro hub” infrastructure designed to fit into compact footprints like parking spaces behind retail locations.
The system automates aircraft storage, battery charging and package loading while minimizing human involvement. The company recently announced a partnership with robotics integrator SoftBank Robotics aimed at helping scale deployment of its automated infrastructure systems.
“We understood very early on that for this thing to scale, you don’t just need autonomy in the sky,” Raptopoulos said. “You need to solve automation on the ground too.”
Matternet says the high level of automation also allows a single operator to supervise up to 20 aircraft simultaneously. Human operators primarily monitor system alerts and can intervene only in limited situations such as commanding an aircraft to return or initiate an emergency landing.
Raptopoulos believes broader regulatory changes expected this year under the FAA’s proposed Part 108 BVLOS rule will accelerate investment into the sector and help push drone delivery into mainstream logistics networks.
“Because the market is still miniscule, we’re going to go through this 1,000x growth over the next four or five years,” he said.
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