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Published
Sep 30, 2016
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German retailer Media Markt tests home delivery by robot

By
Reuters
Published
Sep 30, 2016

German consumer electronics retailer Media Markt is testing using robots to make home delivery of goods faster and more cost effective, although for now they have to be accompanied by a human minder.

A Starship Technologies delivery robot hard at work.



As ecommerce booms and shoppers expect ever-speedier delivery, retailers and logistics firms are facing rising costs, prompting them to experiment with robots and drones as an alternative or complement to deliveries by human couriers.

Media Markt, owned by the Metro group, said on Thursday it is testing two robots not much bigger than vacuum cleaners to deliver packages weighing less than 10 kg within a 5-kilometre radius from a store in the city of Duesseldorf.

Delivery takes between 30 minutes and three hours from the order being placed, although customers can also pick a two-hour window within the next four days.

Under conditions set for the pilot project by the German authorities, the robots are only allowed to travel in daylight, move at a normal walking pace on the footpath and are programmed to give way to oncoming pedestrians.

Media Markt charges its customers 14.95 euros for its existing express delivery service within three hours, but robot delivery could eventually allow them to cut costs and charges.

Starship, the company set up by the former co-founders of web call firm Skype that is developing the six-wheel self-driving robots, said each delivery by robot should eventually cost the retailer less than 1 euro once they move into serial production. It has not announced when that will happen.

For the trial, customers have to be at home to receive the delivery as the robot will send a message to their mobile phone to say when it is at their door as well as a code that will allow them to open the lid of the robot to get their order.

Germany's Deutsche Post said earlier this year that it is testing robots that could help postal workers cope with increasing numbers of parcels on their delivery rounds.

 

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