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How we're using drones to deliver blood and save lives

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    Most people think that new technology,
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    or advanced technology
    can never start in Africa.
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    Instead, they think that the best way
    to help the continent advance
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    is by providing aid or services
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    that the continent
    can't provide for itself.
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    So while we see advanced technology
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    like robotics and aritificial intelligence
    growing exponentially
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    in the developed world,
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    those same people are worried
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    that a technologically backward
    Africa is falling behind.
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    That attitude couldn't be more wrong.
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    I'm a robotics entrepreneur
    who's spent a lot of time here in Africa.
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    And in 2014 we created Zipline,
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    which is a company that uses
    electric autonomous aircraft
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    to deliver medicine to hospitals
    and health centers on demand.
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    And last year,
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    we launched the world's first
    automated delievery system
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    operating at national scale.
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    And guess what?
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    We did not do that in the US,
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    we didn't do it in Japan
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    and we didn't do it in Europe.
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    It was actually President Paul Kagame
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    and the Rwandan Ministry of Health
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    that made a big bet on the potential
    of this technology,
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    and signed a commercial contract
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    to deliver a majority
    of the country's blood on demand.
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    (Applause)
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    Yeah, they deserve the applause.
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    So why is blood important?
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    Rwanda collects between 60
    and 80,000 units of blood a year.
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    So this is a product
    that when you need it,
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    you really, really need it.
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    But blood is also challenging
    because it has a very short shelf life,
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    there are lots of different
    storage requirements,
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    and it's really hard to predict the demand
    for all of these different blood groups
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    before a patient actually needs something.
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    But the cool thing is
    that using this technology,
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    Rwanda has been able to keep
    more blood centralized,
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    and then provide it when
    a patient needs something
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    to any hospital or health center
    in an average of just 20 or 30 minutes.
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    So do you guys want to see how it works?
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    (Audience) Yes.
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    KR: All right, nobody believes me,
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    so better to show.
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    This is our distribution center,
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    which is about 20 kilometers
    outside of Kigali.
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    This actually used to be a cornfield
    nine months ago,
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    and with the Rwandan government,
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    we leveled it and built this center
    in a couple weeks.
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    So when a patient is having an emergency,
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    a doctor or a nurse at that hospital
    can send us a Whatsapp
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    telling us what they need.
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    And then our team will immediately
    spring into action.
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    We pull the blood from our stock,
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    which is delivered from the National
    Center for Blood Transfusion;
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    we scan the blood into our system
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    so the Ministry of Health
    knows where the blood is going,
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    and then we'll basically
    pack it into a Zip,
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    which is what we call these little
    autonomous airplanes
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    that run on batteries.
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    And then once that Zip is ready to go,
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    we accelerate it from zero
    to 100 kilometers an hour
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    in about half of a second.
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    And from the moment it leaves
    the end of the launcher,
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    it's completely autonomous.
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    (Video)
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    This is out air traffic controller
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    calling it in to Kigali
    International airport
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    And when the Zip arrives at the hospital,
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    it descends to about 30 feet,
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    and drops the package.
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    We use a really simple paper parachute --
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    simple things are best --
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    that allows the package to come
    to the ground gently and reliably
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    in the same place every time.
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    It's just like ride sharing;
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    the doctors get a text message
    one minute before we arrive saying,
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    "Walk outside and receive your delivery."
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    (Laughter)
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    And then --
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    (Applause)
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    And then the doctors have
    what they need to save a patient's life.
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    So this is actually watching
    a delivery happen
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    from our distribution center,
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    and this vehicle is about
    50 kilometers away.
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    We're able to watch the vehicle
    as it makes a delivery at a hospital
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    in real time.
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    And you may have noticed there are pings
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    that are coming off of
    that vehicle on the screen.
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    Those pings are actually data packets
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    that we're getting
    over the cell phone networks.
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    So these planes have SIM cards
    just like your cell phone does,
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    and they're communicating
    over the cell network
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    to tell us where they are
    and how they're doing at all times.
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    So believe it or not,
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    we actually buy family plans
    for this fleet of vehicles
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    because that's how we get the best rates.
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    (Laughter)
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    It's actually not a joke.
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    (Laughter)
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    Today we're delivering about 20 percent
    of the national blood supply of Rwanda
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    outside of Kigali.
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    We serve about 12 hospitals,
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    and we're adding hospitals to that network
    at an accelerating rate.
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    All of those hospitals only receive
    blood in this way.
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    And most of those hospitals
    actually place multiple order every day.
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    So the reason --
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    in all of health care logistics,
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    you're always trading off
    waste against access.
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    So if you want to solve waste,
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    you keep everything centralized,
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    and as a result,
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    when patients are having emergencies,
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    sometimes they don't have
    the medical product that they need.
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    If you want to solve access,
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    you stock a lot of medicine
    at the last mile,
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    at hospitals or health centers,
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    and then patients have
    the medicine they need,
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    but you end up throwing
    a lot of medicine out,
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    which is very, very expensive.
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    What's so amazing
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    is that the Rwandan
    government has been able
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    to break this cycle permanently.
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    Because doctors can get
    what they need instantly,
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    they actually stock
    less blood at the hospitals.
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    So although use of blood products
    has increased substantially
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    at all the hospitals we serve,
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    in the last nine months,
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    zero units of blood have expired
    at any of these hospitals.
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    (Applause)
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    That's an amazing result.
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    That's actually not been achieved
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    by any other health care system
    on the planet ...
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    and it happened here.
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    But obviously when we're talking about
    delivering medical products instantly,
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    the most important thing is patience.
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    And so let me give you an example.
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    A couple months ago,
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    a 24-year-old mother came into one
    of the hospitals that we serve,
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    and she gave birth via C-section.
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    But that led to complications,
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    and she started to bleed.
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    Luckily, the doctors had some blood
    of her blood type on hand
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    that had been delivered
    via Zipline's routine service,
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    and so they transfused her
    with a couple units of blood,
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    but she bled out of those units
    in about 10 minutes.
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    In this case,
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    that mother's life is in grave danger --
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    in any hospital in the world.
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    But luckily her doctors who were
    taking care of her immediately called
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    their distribution center,
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    they placed an emergency order
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    and our team actually did emergency
    delivery, after emergency delivery,
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    after emergency delivery.
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    They ended up sending
    seven units of red blood cells,
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    four units of plasma
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    and two units of platelets.
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    That's more blood than you have
    in your entire body.
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    All of it was transfused into her,
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    the doctors were able to stabilize her
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    and she is healthy today.
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    (Applause)
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    Since we launched,
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    we've done about 400
    emergency deliveries like that,
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    and there's a story like that one
    behind most of those emergencies.
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    Here are just a couple of the moms
    who have received transfusions in this way
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    in the last couple months.
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    We're always reminded,
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    when we can help a doctor
    save a mom's life,
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    it's not just her life that you're saving.
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    That's also a baby boy or a baby girl
    who has a mother while they're growing up.
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    (Applause)
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    But I want to be clear.
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    Postpartum hemorrhaging --
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    it's not a Rwandan problem,
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    it's not a developing-world problem;
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    this is a global problem.
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    Maternal health is a challenge everywhere.
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    The main difference is that Rwanda
    was the first country
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    to use radical technology
    to do something about it.
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    And that's the reason
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    that this attitude
    of Africa being disrupted,
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    or advanced technology not working here,
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    or needing aid,
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    is so totally wrong.
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    Africa can be the disrupter.
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    These small, agile, developing economies
    can out-innovate large rich ones.
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    And they can totally leapfrog over
    the absence of legacy infastructure
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    to go straight to newer
    and better systems.
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    So in 2000,
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    if you had said that high-quality
    cellular networks
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    were about to roll out
    across all of Africa,
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    people would've told you you were crazy.
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    And yet --
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    no one anticipated how fast those networks
    were going to connect and empower people.
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    And today, 44 percent of the GDP
    of Kenya flows through M-Pesa,
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    their mobile payment platform.
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    And not only that,
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    but our autonomous fleet of vehicles
    relies on that cellular network,
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    and over the next few years
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    as we start serving private
    health care facilities,
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    we'll also use that mobile
    payment platform
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    to collect fees for deliveries.
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    So innovation leads to more innovation
    leads to more innovation.
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    And meanwhile,
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    most people who live
    in developed economies
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    think that drone delivery
    is technologically impossible,
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    let alone happening
    at national scale in East Africa.
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    And I do mean East Africa,
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    not just Rwanda.
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    On Thursday,
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    just a couple days ago,
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    the Tanzanian Ministry of Health announced
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    that they are going to use
    the same technology
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    to provide instant delivery of a wide
    range of medical products
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    to 10 million of the hardest to reach
    people in the country.
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    (Applause)
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    It's actually going to be the largest
    autonomous system anywhere in the world.
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    To give you a sense
    of what this looks like,
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    this is one of the first
    distribution centers.
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    You can see a 75-kilometer service radius
    around the distribution center,
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    and that actually allows us to serve
    hundreds of health facilities
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    and hospitals,
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    all of which are rural,
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    from that single distribution center.
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    But to serve over 20 percent
    of the population of Tanzania,
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    we're going to need multiple
    distribution centers.
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    We'll actually need four.
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    And from these distribution centers,
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    we expect to be doing several hundred
    life-saving deliveries every day,
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    and this system will ultimately serve
    over 1,000 health facilities
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    and hospitals in the country.
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    So yeah, East Africa
    is moving really fast.
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    One thing that people I think often miss
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    is that these kinds of leaps
    generate compounding gains.
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    If, for example, Rwanda,
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    if by investing in this infrastructure
    for health care
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    now has an aerial logistics network
    that they can use
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    to catalyze other parts of their economy,
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    like agricultre of e-commerce.
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    Even more importantly,
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    100 percent of the teams that we hire
    at these distribution centers are local.
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    So here's our Rwandan team,
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    which is a group of extraordinary
    engineers and operators.
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    They run the world's only
    automated delivery system
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    operating a national scale.
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    They have been able to master something
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    that the largest technology
    companies in the world
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    have not yet been able to figure out.
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    So they are total heroes.
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    (Applause)
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    They're total heroes.
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    Our team's mission is to deliver
    basic access to medicine
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    to all seven billion on the planet,
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    no matter how hard it is to reach them.
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    But we often tell people
    about that mission
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    and they say, "Oh,
    that's so generous of you,
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    that's so philanthropic."
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    No.
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    Philanthropy has nothing to do with it.
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    Because of the commercial contracts
    that we sign with ministries of health,
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    these networks are 100 percent
    sustainable and scalable.
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    And the reason we feel so strongly
    about correcting that misperception
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    is that entrepreneurship
    is the only force in human history
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    that has lifted millions
    of people out of poverty.
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    (Applause)
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    No amount of foreign aid
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    is going to sustainably employ
    250 million African youth.
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    And the jobs that these kids
    may have gotten 10 years ago
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    are largely being automated,
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    or are being changed dramatically
    by technology.
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    So they are looking for new skill sets,
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    new competitive advantages.
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    They're looking for startups.
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    So why aren't there more startups
    that are tackling these global problems
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    that are faced by billions of people
    in developing economies?
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    The reason is that investors
    and entrepreneurs and totally blind
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    to the opportunity.
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    We think these problems are the domain
    of NGOs or governments,
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    not private companies.
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    That's what we have to change.
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    So you may have noticed I left
    something out of the video
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    that I showed you.
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    I didn't show you how the planes land
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    when they get back
    to the distribution center.
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    So, it might be obvious to you --
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    none of our planes have landing gear,
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    we also don't have runways
    where we operate,
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    so we have to be able to decelerate
    the plane from 100 kilometers an hour
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    to zero in half of a second.
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    And the way that we do that
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    is we actually use a wire that tracks
    that plane as it comes in
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    with centimeter-level accuracy.
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    We snag the plane out of the sky,
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    and we gently plop it onto
    and actively inflated cushion.
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    This is basically a combination
    of an air craft carrier
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    and a bouncy castle.
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    (Laughter)
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    So let me show you.
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    (Laugther)
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    (Applause)
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    And it might be obvious to you
    why I wanted to end with this video.
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    I wanted to show you the kids
    and the teenagers
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    who line up on the fence every day,
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    and they cheer every launch
    and every landing.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    Sometimes I actually show up
    at the distribution center early
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    because I'm jet-lagged,
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    so I'll show up an hour before
    we begin operation,
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    and there will be kids on the fence
    getting good seats.
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    (Laughter)
Title:
How we're using drones to deliver blood and save lives
Speaker:
Keller Rinaudo
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:30

English subtitles

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