Aeromedical logistics company Swoop Aero secures Series A funding for ANZ expansion

The startup says it aims to provide one hundred million people with better access to healthcare by 2025.
By Dean Koh
03:41 am
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Credit: Swoop Aero

Launched in 2017, Australia-based aeromedical logistics company Swoop Aero announced that it has closed a Series A funding round with returning investors Right Click Capital and Tempus Partners. The startup will use the latest eight figure sum capital injection to establish a presence in Australia and New Zealand (ANZ), as well as expand its service offering across the medical logistics space. 

Swoop Aero says it aims to provide one hundred million people with better access to healthcare by 2025. The funding will also serve to certify its aviation systems for operations over urban areas which will help the business come closer to their goal.

Over the past three years, the startup has established operations in five countries through partnerships with global health leaders including UNICEF, UKAid and DFID, impacting over two million people. Most recently, it claimed that they are the first company in the world to remotely pilot commercially used drones from another country, when delivering PPE and critical supplies in Malawi (Southeastern Africa) during the COVID-19 pandemic, whilst piloting the aircraft from Australia.

The startup said it has started work with the Civil Aviation Authority of New Zealand to achieve requisite Beyond Visual Line of Sight (BVLOS) approvals to transport pathology tests and samples locally via the air.

THE LARGER TREND

In March, Germany’s Wingcopter, an eVTOL (electric vertical take-off and landing) drone manufacturer, secured further funding from Corecam Capital Partners, MobiHealthNews reported. Wingcopter’s transport drones, developed for humanitarian and civil applications, have been used in projects delivering medicines, vaccines, blood and lab samples over long distances to areas that are hard to reach.

SOS Alarm, the company that operates Sweden’s 112 emergency number, will make use of drones to deliver Automated External Defibrillators (AED) for out-of-hospital cardiac arrests (OHCA) for the first time in a trial that begins this month and will last till September. 

ON THE RECORD

“As COVID-19 has shown, problems with access to much needed healthcare supplies are consistent across the globe, even in developed countries like Australia, where pathology tests take days to arrive, if they arrive at all. We’re laser focused on further developing our service offering in ANZ and expanding operations so that more people can access vital services. We can’t imagine a future where drone transport isn’t a universally critical component of the health supply chain,” said Eric Peck, CEO and co-founder of Swoop Aero in a statement. 

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