Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Drone Delivery is Here: Zipline CEO Shares the Future of Product Transport
Anya gvwire profile photo (1)
By Anya Ellis
Published 3 weeks ago on
January 25, 2025
Play Video

Zipline co-founder and CEO Keller Rinaudo Cliffton

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Groundbreaking technology can happen anywhere. This is the message Zipline’s co-founder and CEO Keller Rinaudo Cliffton left the audience with at Mercedes Edwards Theatre on Tuesday night.

The robotics trailblazer founded Zipline alongside Keenan Wyrobek in 2014. Two years later, they began operations in Rwanda after President Paul Kagame and the Ministry of Health made a “big bet” on the drone company’s potential.

Now, it is helping to save lives across the world.

Rinaudo Cliffton walked attendees through the creation of Zipline, mistakes made along the way, and the future of the company, including a multitude of sci-fi references and unwavering optimism.

He spoke in Clovis as part of San Joaquin Valley Town Hall’s new “Twilight Talks” series.

About Zipline

Zipline, the world’s largest commercial autonomous delivery system, has made over a million deliveries across seven countries.

The organization started delivering needed medical supplies, such as blood and plasma, to Rwandan hospitals in 2016. Packing facilities load blood packets into a drone, which is launched into the sky, accelerating from 0 to 62 mph in half a second. Then, the fully autonomous drone travels to its destination and drops the package using a paper parachute.

Rinaudo Cliffton shared a story about a mother who began to bleed out during a C-section. Hospital staff fed her blood, obtained through Zipline’s routine delivery, but she quickly bled through that as well. Doctors were able to order more blood, enough to fill an entire body, from Zipline and save the woman’s life. This is just one story out of thousands, says Rinaudo Cliffton.

Since then, the company has expanded to provide food, retail, agriculture products, and animal health products to the United States, Ghana, Nigeria, Cote d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast), Kenya, and Japan.

Zipline drones, nicknamed Zips, have flown nearly 100 million commercial miles, operating through two platforms — one for long-range delivery and one for precise home delivery. The 50-pound  aircraft are completely electric, providing a 98% reduction in delivery emissions compared to cars and a 94% reduction compared to electric vehicles.

There is an average five-minute turnaround time for Zips, which operate in regulated and unregulated airspace.

Zipline’s Company Moto and Philosophy

Zipline was not an overnight success. Rinaudo Cliffton unashamedly showed the many failures the company endured along the way. Videos showed drones failing to launch or shattering after a retrieval machine failed to properly catch it.

There was an audible disappointment from the Zipline team, some moved to tears due to the failure.

Rinaudo Cliffton, maintaining his constant optimism and light-heartedness, joked that a school banner he saw online explained it perfectly: We don’t do it because it’s easy. We do it because we think it’s easy.

The company is committed to moving fast and learning by doing. They are willing to take risks to produce large-scale changes and new technologies.

Rinaudo Cliffton credits Zipline’s continued success and constant development to this mindset and business motto.

Phase Two Launch

This week, the company launched platform two, a newly developed Zip. The new drone is designed to attach to existing operations and make ultra-precise deliveries.

Loading portals are attached to existing buildings, allowing seamless packaging of deliveries with no extra training required.

Upon reaching its destination, the drone hovers about 30 feet above ground and lowers a smaller compartment via an extended line. This allows Zips to leave packages exactly where the customer wants, including doorsteps or a patio table.

Rinaudo Cliffton described this as a less abrasive delivery that doesn’t require a “scary” drone to come close to your home. Additionally, Zips are programmed to “act shy” if movement is detected in the landing zone.

Companies, such as Walmart and Sweetgreen, use Zips to deliver groceries and meals to customers. This can occur any time of day so customers can ensure they’re home when packages are delivered.

Public Concern About New Technology

The Harvard graduate opened the floor, asking how many people had watched a film about robots trying to take over the world in the past year. Most raised their hands with awkward laughs.

Rinaudo Cliffton said that this technology becomes a norm quickly, and people are quick to adapt. He described a five-day period of amazement that customers experience, which turns into boredom.

During a question-and-answer session, an audience member circled back to these concerns. She questioned how delivery drivers, who often already struggle financially and work multiple jobs, would fare in a drone delivery future.

Rinaudo Cliffton believes people adjust quickly and create new needs. He pointed to the quick turnover rate of drivers as an indicator that it’s not a job people “want.” There is always panic around the implementation of new technology, which people then quickly adapt to and rely on, he said.

He then described a future in which technology and humans work alongside one another to ensure a better life for all.

 

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

CHP K-9 Seizes 50 Pounds of Illicit Mushrooms in Fresno County

DON'T MISS

Saint Agnes to Expand Teaching for Clovis Med School Students

DON'T MISS

Belarus Releases 3 People, Including an American and a Jailed Journalist

DON'T MISS

Need Down Payment Help? Fresno Housing Has $25K for First-Time Homebuyers

DON'T MISS

Pentagon’s New Media Rotation Program Boots NPR, NY Times, NBC News

DON'T MISS

Bredefeld Wants Less Scrutiny for Supervisors’ Discretionary Budget. Pacheco Calls It ‘Ironic.’

DON'T MISS

Senate Confirms Gabbard as Trump’s Director of National Intelligence

DON'T MISS

President Trump and Putin Have Agreed to Start Negotiations to End the Ukraine War

DON'T MISS

Google Calendar Users No Longer See Default Entries for Events Like Pride, Black History Month

DON'T MISS

Apple Changes Gulf of Mexico to Gulf of America on Maps

UP NEXT

Need Down Payment Help? Fresno Housing Has $25K for First-Time Homebuyers

UP NEXT

Bredefeld Wants Less Scrutiny for Supervisors’ Discretionary Budget. Pacheco Calls It ‘Ironic.’

UP NEXT

Google Calendar Users No Longer See Default Entries for Events Like Pride, Black History Month

UP NEXT

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Erik Michael Alexander Gropp

UP NEXT

Visalia Man Arrested for Beating Dog, Confronting Officers

UP NEXT

Filmmaker Dallas Jenkins Is Keynote Speaker for Fresno Clovis Prayer Breakfast

UP NEXT

Blood Center Picks Long-Time Industry Leader as New CEO

UP NEXT

Fresno Pedestrian Killed in Crash Identified

UP NEXT

Can a Joint Fresno Committee Allay Immigration Fears? These Leaders Want to Try

UP NEXT

Bulldogs Fall at Nevada. Are They Headed for Worst Season in Nearly 50 Years?

Anya Ellis,
Multimedia Journalist
Anya Ellis began working for GV Wire in July 2023. The daughter of journalists, Anya is a Fresno native and Buchanan High School graduate. She is currently at the University of California, Berkeley, majoring in film and media studies and minoring in creative writing. She plans to pursue her masters in screenwriting after graduating. You can contact Anya at anya.ellis@gvwire.com.

Need Down Payment Help? Fresno Housing Has $25K for First-Time Homebuyers

20 minutes ago

Pentagon’s New Media Rotation Program Boots NPR, NY Times, NBC News

35 minutes ago

Bredefeld Wants Less Scrutiny for Supervisors’ Discretionary Budget. Pacheco Calls It ‘Ironic.’

45 minutes ago

Senate Confirms Gabbard as Trump’s Director of National Intelligence

2 hours ago

President Trump and Putin Have Agreed to Start Negotiations to End the Ukraine War

3 hours ago

Google Calendar Users No Longer See Default Entries for Events Like Pride, Black History Month

3 hours ago

Apple Changes Gulf of Mexico to Gulf of America on Maps

3 hours ago

Kevin Durant Becomes 8th in NBA History to Score 30,000 Points

3 hours ago

Too Few Tents Entering Gaza Threatens the Truce. Here’s What’s Happening

3 hours ago

California’s FAIR Plan Needs $1B for Wildfire Claims, Costs Passed to Policyholders

3 hours ago

CHP K-9 Seizes 50 Pounds of Illicit Mushrooms in Fresno County

A California Highway Patrol K-9 officer seized approximately 50 pounds of illicit mushrooms valued at $80,000 during a traffic stop on Feb.6...

9 minutes ago

A CHP K-9 seized 50 pounds of illicit mushrooms worth $80,000 during a traffic stop on I-5 in Fresno County, leading to the arrest of Phillip Yoon, 35, of Hayward. (CHP)
10 minutes ago

CHP K-9 Seizes 50 Pounds of Illicit Mushrooms in Fresno County

11 minutes ago

Saint Agnes to Expand Teaching for Clovis Med School Students

17 minutes ago

Belarus Releases 3 People, Including an American and a Jailed Journalist

20 minutes ago

Need Down Payment Help? Fresno Housing Has $25K for First-Time Homebuyers

35 minutes ago

Pentagon’s New Media Rotation Program Boots NPR, NY Times, NBC News

45 minutes ago

Bredefeld Wants Less Scrutiny for Supervisors’ Discretionary Budget. Pacheco Calls It ‘Ironic.’

Tulsi Gabbard, President Donald Trump's choice to be the Director of National Intelligence, arrives to appear before the Senate Intelligence Committee for her confirmation hearing on Capitol Hill Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025, in Washington. (AP/John McDonnell)
2 hours ago

Senate Confirms Gabbard as Trump’s Director of National Intelligence

President Donald Trump arrives to greet Marc Fogel at the White House, Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2025, in Washington. (AP/Alex Brandon)
3 hours ago

President Trump and Putin Have Agreed to Start Negotiations to End the Ukraine War

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend