Amazon successfully delivers UK’s first ever parcel by drone – just 13 minutes after it was ordered
The technology firm's founder and chief executive Jeff Bezos confirmed the delivery was made in just 13 minutes in Cambridgeshire
AMAZON has confirmed the first customer delivery by drone in the UK has been a success, and it will now roll out a private trial.
The firm's founder and chief executive Jeff Bezos tweeted the news after the maiden voyage.
"First-ever #AmazonPrimeAir customer delivery is in the books. 13 min - click to delivery," he wrote on the social media site.
Amazon said a new private trial will now deliver packages up to five pounds in weight in 30 minutes or less using the drones, which it began testing in the UK earlier this year.
The firm has not commented further on where or to whom the trial will be available.
The internet giant plans to use drones to deliver packages to customers within 30 minutes of purchase.
Last year, it unveiled a flying robot that can travel at 50mph for ten miles and carry parcels of around 3kg.
At the time, Amazon released official footage of its drones, but the craft seen in the video appears to look significantly different from the model which has been shown off before.
For this flight a quadcopter drone delivered an Amazon Fire TV box and a bag of popcorn to a customer.
Amazon, which has been testing drone deliveries in the US and elsewhere, has on several occasions complained that the regulatory environment in the United States for these automated deliveries is more cumbersome.
In its video, Amazon noted that it is working with two customers receiving drone deliveries in the Cambridge area and soon hoped to expand to "dozens" near its warehouse.
Earlier this month the Sun Online obtained top secret footage of the experimental delivery drone filmed in action for the first time.
It shows the flying machine zooming through the skies over Amazon's testing facility in rural Cambridgeshire.
Cameramen filmed the drone from nearby public land, showing it zooming through the sky and performing a smooth landing.
The Civil Aviation Authority lifted strict regulations on drones in July that would allow Amazon to begin testing the project.
And the latest pictures reveal it is already well on its way to making the groundbreaking idea a reality.
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Amazon officially began testing the craft in the summer of 2016, but leaked emails recently suggested it .
The facility is closely guarded to stop anyone sneaking a peek at the experimental craft.
Photographer Dean Cranston said locals had become increasingly intrigued by what was happening on the field, which sits about 10 miles south of Cambridge.
He and two other photographers decided to check out the site after locals became worried and curious about what was happening – but they were confronted by unhappy security.
He said residents had been baffled by the “cloak and dagger” activities.
Speaking to the Sun Online, he said: “Amazon is obviously ploughing tens of millions of dollars into the future of how to deliver parcels.
“They have basically hired a farmer’s field in Cambridge, taking it over and doing something there on the land.”
He said security armed with ear pieces, binoculars and radios monitored the site constantly, ensuring anyone from the public did not venture off a nature path onto the field.
He said: “They won’t identify themselves, they won’t confirm or deny anything.
“It’s very peculiar.”
He said some locals had even speculated that there were “UFOs” at the site so he decided to video their discussions with security.
But while visiting the field on Thursday, he said the group had been confronted by men, including one with a scarf over his face, who insisted they leave.
Refusing to confirm if they were security, the men were recorded by the savvy photographers who demanded to know why they were being made to move on.
It was only once another security guard appeared – having been radioed in – and ashowed his identification that the photographers agreed to leave.
Mr Cranston said: “It felt really hostile, like some kind of cult.
“You wouldn’t believe what’s going on there… we were told by locals that there was a lot of strange behaviour going on.”
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