DOD wants drones to deliver blood on the battlefield

A recent solicitation from DIUx points to a plan to advance front-line medical care for combat troops.

Battlefield drones typically deliver weapons or spy out enemy positions. Now the U.S. military is looking for ideas on how to deliver blood and medical products to remote locations to treat wounded troops on the spot.

The specs of the solicitation from the Defense Innovation Unit Experimental -- the ability to deliver a 5-pound package over 100 kilometers in "austere environments" -- strongly suggest that they're looking at an unmanned aerial vehicle system that supports refrigeration or other means of temperature control.

"These deliveries, ideally automated, will provide essential items to critically wounded military personnel as quickly as possible after an injury occurs," the April 23 solicitation states. "Ability to sustain a very high frequency of operations over an extended period of time is critical. Speed of delivery, reliability and robustness to failure and interference, response time, and overall delivery throughput are critical."

Similar efforts are underway elsewhere in the Department of Defense. The Marine Corps' Next Generation Logistics branch and DOD’s Rapid Reaction Technology Office, for example, recently tested the Hive Final Mile project, which aims to resupply troops on the battlefield via drone. That system involves a mobile application for placing orders, an automated drone launcher, software for determining what drone to fly and managing flight paths, and a cloud storage component for keeping track of all the flights and orders.

DIUx is looking for solutions from vendors by May 1, with an eye to fielding a system within two to three months.