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FAA probes Amazon after delivery drone snaps internet cable in Texas, CNBC reports

CNBC reported Tuesday that the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration has opened an investigation into Amazon after one its delivery drones damaged a cable in central Texas, last week. The spokesperson for the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), who was quoted by CNBC, said this.

CNBC was informed by the e-commerce giant that the incident occurred after the drone clipped the internet cable. The drone then performed a safe contingent landing.

The network reviewed video footage of one of Amazon's MK30 Drones as it was ascending out of a customer yard. One of the six propellers got entangled with a utility wire. The motors of the drone were shut off, which led to a controlled descent.

The National Transportation Safety Board said that it was not conducting an investigation into the incident. Amazon and FAA didn't immediately respond to requests for comments.

The NTSB and FAA announced in October they would be investigating a separate incident in which two Amazon Prime Air drones had collided in Arizona with a crane's boom.

Amazon began delivering prescription medication by drones to College Station, Texas customers in 2023 in partnership with Amazon Pharmacy.

By the year 2030, the e-commerce company aims to deliver 500 million packages per annum by drone.

(source: Reuters)