Vancouver Sun

Robot makers fill war chests in fight against Amazon

- KIM BHASIN AND PATRICK CLARK

A few years ago, Amazon.com triggered a robot arms race when it purchased a company called Kiva Systems, maker of automated warehouse robots. Now its competitor­s are landing bigger cash injections to lay low the e-commerce giant.

Locus Robotics, a spinoff of a warehouse company that decided to build its own robots after the Amazon deal back in 2012, raised another US$25 million in venture capital, bringing its total funding to more than US$33 million, the company announced last week.

The new cash for Locus followed a US$15 million injection in July for 6 River Systems, a robotics company founded by ex-Kiva executives. In March, China warehouse robotics startup Geek+, which boasts Alibaba as a client, raised US$22 million. Competitor RightHand added US$8 million in venture funding this year as well.

Warehouses are more plentiful than ever, as retailers and logistics companies scramble to add more space in more places. Retailers must get as close to their customers as possible, as shoppers order online more often and demand shorter delivery times.

Builders spent US$2.6 billion on warehouse constructi­on in September, more than triple what they spent in September 2012. Retailers and logistics companies are experiment­ing with robot workers in a bid to make these new industrial buildings more productive.

“Fulfilment warehouses are under tremendous pressure to meet increasing demands for fast, accurate order fulfilment in the face of significan­t labour challenges,” said Rick Faulk, chief executive of Locus Robotics, in a statement. “In an economy largely dominated by Amazon, Locus arms independen­t operators with the means to compete effectivel­y.”

The warehouse industry employed 960,400 Americans in October, up 42 per cent over the past decade, according to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Now the industry is struggling to find the workers it needs: 219,000 employees were hired by transporta­tion, warehousin­g, and utilities firms in September, while another 246,000 open positions went unfilled.

Robots aid workers with their tasks. Warehouse jobs are often gruelling, as employees must walk miles across the floor picking up items and shuttling them to their destinatio­ns.

Automation comes in several forms-Kiva’s bots slide across the floor like giant hockey pucks, latching onto pallets and shuttling them away; RightHand has a robotic arm that plucks items and drops them into boxes. As for the Locus bot, it exists to do much of the walking for workers, scurrying up to them with instructio­ns on what they must pick from a shelf and place on the bot’s body.

Scale Venture Partners, a Foster City, Calif.-based firm that invests in technology for the workplace, led the funding round in Locus.

 ?? PETER MACDIARMID/GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Amazon.com’s rollout of warehouse robots has led to amplified competitio­n to invest, develop and use robot workers in order to make companies more productive.
PETER MACDIARMID/GETTY IMAGES FILES Amazon.com’s rollout of warehouse robots has led to amplified competitio­n to invest, develop and use robot workers in order to make companies more productive.

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