Robots (finally) in the streets

INSIGHT:
With lockdowns, the rise of delivery was inevitable, but it is often at the cost of social distancing with the delivery drivers. Companies already involved with robots and drones are moving their experiments into the streets at the service of consumers.

DEEP DIVE:

  • Starship technologies, EU-based, small robots (opposite picture) were until now only used in experiments in closed down environments such as universities. Since early April, they are in the streets of Temple, Arizona, delivering pizzas.
  • Nuro, US-based, grocery delivery autonomous cars’, (pictures below) with partnerships with Walmart and Kroger
  • Alphabet (Google parent company), drone delivery operation is booming with a doubling of its locations in Australia and in the US (picture below)
  • Manna, another European startup (in Ireland) has begun delivering medicine to vulnerable people

WHY IT MATTERS?
Things are moving incredibly fast. Indeed, for those of you following as we do at DigitalFoodLab, all the experiments made in the last couple of years with robots and drones, you were probably frustrated by their slowness. It seemed that political pressure around the jobs of delivery drivers and a somewhat luddite attitude were limiting them.

However, many corporates and retailers (such as Kroger, PepsiCo or Sodexo) were already experimenting with the leading startups (Nuro, Starship, Mana among them). It will be interesting to see if these early adopters get a β€œreward” of their early bets in the form of data and learnings (and then move forward to expend the reach of robotic delivery).

Find out more in our FOODTECH INTERRUPTED REPORT on the impact of COVID-19 on the FoodTech ecosystem

Manna drones

Instacart, the Uber for groceries is booming during COVID-19
FoodTech recap: startups and COVID-19

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