The Peterborough Examiner

Uber launches grocery delivery in Toronto

Tech giant sees venture as way to become one-stop shop for every meal

- TARA DESCHAMPS

Uber Technologi­es Inc. is getting into the grocery delivery business and is using some Canadian cities to help it launch the venture.

The San Francisco-based tech giant said Tuesday that users in Montreal and Toronto can now order groceries through its Uber and Uber Eats apps.

“They’ll be able to place orders from local merchants and receive them in as little as one to two hours,” Daniel Danker, who runs Uber’s product team, told reporters.

A demonstrat­ion of the new service showed thousands of items available from retailers including Walmart, Metro, Rexall, Costco, Longos, Pet Value and Well.ca.

The company’s foray into the grocery sector comes after Uber advertised in November 2018 that it was hiring a head of grocery product in Toronto.

The company remained secretive about the role, but a year later, Uber’s potential interest in a grocery service was a hot topic again when it announced it was acquiring a majority stake in Chilean grocery delivery start-up Cornershop.

The deal was held up by a Mexican Competitio­n Authority investigat­ion, but is supposed to close in the coming days.

Cornershop will serve as Uber’s partner in the grocery delivery venture, which will launch in more than a dozen Latin American cities alongside the Canadian markets.

Uber faces stiff competitio­n with its new service. Amazon and Instacart are already going head-to-head with supermarke­t brands like Walmart and Loblaw.

Uber believes it can edge out some of the competitio­n because it sees groceries as a natural extension of its booming food delivery service and a way for the company to become a one-stop shop for every meal.

Uber’s ride-hailing business is still in “recovery mode,” according to Danker.

“I think this would have made a lot sense in a pre-COVID world, but our world has just fundamenta­lly changed and so this represents even more of a huge responsibi­lity for us,” Danker said.

 ?? RANDY RISLING TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? A demonstrat­ion of Uber’s new grocery delivery service showed thousands of items available from retailers including Walmart, Metro, Rexall, Costco, Longos, Pet Value and Well.ca.
RANDY RISLING TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO A demonstrat­ion of Uber’s new grocery delivery service showed thousands of items available from retailers including Walmart, Metro, Rexall, Costco, Longos, Pet Value and Well.ca.

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