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Amazon Scraps Drone Delivery Plans in Italy After Strategic Review

Amazon has decided to halt its plans to launch drone-based delivery services in Italy, citing regulatory and business challenges that undermine the project’s long-term viability. The company confirmed the decision on Sunday following a strategic review of its operations in the country.

Amazon said that although it had made meaningful progress with Italian aerospace regulators, the broader regulatory environment did not support its commercial objectives for drone delivery. “Following a strategic review, we have decided to stop our commercial drone delivery plans in Italy,” the company said in a statement. It added that, despite positive engagement with regulators, the overall business framework remains a limiting factor.

Italy’s civil aviation authority, ENAC, described the move as unexpected. In a statement released on Saturday, ENAC said the decision appeared to be driven by internal company policy and was linked to “recent financial events involving the Group,” without providing further details.

Amazon had previously signaled strong momentum for the initiative. In December 2024, the company announced the successful completion of initial drone delivery tests in San Salvo, a town in the central Abruzzo region. Those trials were seen as a key step toward introducing faster, automated delivery services in Italy as part of Amazon’s broader global drone program.

The halt underscores the challenges facing commercial drone delivery projects, which must navigate not only aviation safety rules but also complex national business and regulatory environments. While Amazon continues to test and operate drone delivery services in select markets, Italy will no longer be part of its near-term expansion plans.

U.S. Authorities Investigate Amazon Drone Crashes in Arizona

The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) have launched investigations into two Amazon Prime Air delivery drones that crashed after colliding with a crane in Tolleson, Arizona, on Wednesday.

Amazon had started its drone delivery service in the Phoenix metro area’s West Valley in November 2024, allowing customers to receive small packages—up to 5 pounds (2.3 kg)—within an hour. The company paused drone operations in Arizona following the incident but said they would resume flights on Friday.

Amazon spokesperson Terrence Clark stated that the company’s internal review found no technical malfunction in the drones or their supporting systems. He emphasized that “safety is our top priority,” and announced new measures such as enhanced visual landscape inspections to better detect moving obstacles like cranes in future operations.

The accidents come as Amazon continues to push toward its ambitious goal of delivering 500 million packages per year by drone by 2030. The company has been steadily expanding its autonomous delivery network, including a 2023 partnership with Amazon Pharmacy to deliver prescription medications by drone in College Station, Texas.

Broader regulatory shifts are also underway. In August 2025, the U.S. Department of Transportation proposed updated rules allowing drones to fly beyond the visual line of sight of operators—an essential step toward mainstream drone delivery. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy described the initiative as transformative: “It’s going to change the way that people and products move throughout our airspace… You may get your Amazon package—or even your Starbucks coffee—from a drone.”

The Tolleson incident underscores both the promise and complexity of integrating drones into everyday logistics, as regulators and industry leaders race to balance innovation with airspace safety.