In what might be the most significant drone delivery announcement of 2025, Zipline just landed a groundbreaking $150 million partnership with the U.S. State Department to massively expand its medical drone delivery operations across Africa.
At the same time, African countries will match that investment with up to $400 million in utilization fees, potentially tripling the network from 5,000 to 15,000 health facilities.
A different approach to drone delivery
Over the past few years, I’ve watched companies like Wing focus on suburban food and retail deliveries in places like Australia and Texas, building out their operations one neighborhood at a time. Amazon’s Prime Air has been testing medical deliveries in College Station, but at a very small scale. Skyways is focused on commercial cargo deliveries with its heavy-lift V3 drone. Meanwhile, Matternet has carved out a niche in hospital-to-hospital transport.
Zipline has been playing a completely different game from day one.
Since that first delivery in Rwanda back in 2016, Zipline has been focused on solving medical-related logistics problems in places where traditional infrastructure falls short. Since then, it says it has completed 1.8 million autonomous deliveries with zero safety incidents. And the benefits of its deliveries? The company points to improvements including maternal deaths reduced by up to 56% at facilities they serve, and medicine stockouts cut by 60%.
Though Zipline has since expanded to U.S. deliveries, it has found most of its success in developing countries (primarily in Africa), where leaders say the need outweighs anything else.
According to the company, their service has been identified as “one of the most cost-effective immunization interventions ever studied.” In areas where the average delivery time was 13 days, Zipline cut it to under 30 minutes. Compare that to some of the drone delivery trials we’ve covered where the big win is getting your burrito 15 minutes faster, and you start to see why this matters on a completely different level.
Watch more about Zipline’s growth below:
Related read: Zipline’s Okeoma Moronu shares growth plans for drone delivery (including U.S. expansion)
A new model for foreign aid from the U.S. State Department
What makes this U.S. State Department deal particularly interesting is the pay-for-performance structure. The U.S. is essentially covering the upfront infrastructure costs — building out new Zipline hubs, manufacturing capacity — but the $150 million only gets released when African governments sign expansion contracts and commit to paying for ongoing services.
It’s an interesting model, where foreign aid meets venture capital meets public health infrastructure. And according to the announcement, Rwanda is expected to be the first country to sign on under this new model.
“African governments are choosing to invest their own resources in Zipline because it works, and it’s incredible value for money,” said Caitlin Burton, CEO of Zipline’s Africa business, in a prepared statement.
How Zipline fits into the broader drone delivery scene
The global drone delivery market is still in its early stages, with most operations remaining in trial or limited commercial phases. This Zipline expansion is one of a few thhat represents something different: proven, scaled operations that governments are willing to fund.
Nigeria’s Minister of Health specifically called out how drone delivery has “eliminated stockouts, created new service points even where there is no health facility, and improved treatment success and health outcomes.”
Zipline’s CEO Keller Rinaudo Cliffton called this “a new era of commercial diplomacy — one that uses U.S. innovation to drive global health and economic development.”
While much of the drone delivery industry within the U.S. has focused on the convenience economy — getting packages to consumers faster — Zipline is betting that there is a massive market in solving real infrastructure gaps in healthcare logistics. And now, the U.S. government is betting $150 million that this model works too.
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