China Daily (Hong Kong)

Meituan takes new step on unmanned deliveries

- By CHENG YU chengyu@chinadaily.com.cn

The nation’s largest on-demand service provider Meituan launched an open platform for autonomous delivery on Wednesday to accelerate the applicatio­n and commercial­ization of autonomous technologi­es in its online delivery business.

The open platform will combine the efforts of leading autonomous technology and related component companies including robot maker Segway and autonomous driving company AutoX, as well as universiti­es and research institutes, to jointly develop technologi­es needed for unmanned delivery vehicles.

“Autonomous delivery is never easy. We hope to improve efficiency and accelerate the landing of unmanned delivery through joint efforts of different partners on the open platform,” said Wang Huiwen, co-founder and senior deputy president of Meituan.

Meituan, a group buying and dining platform with 320 million active users and more than 4 million merchants, has already started trial operations of autonomous delivery in a shopping mall, office building and university campus.

Meituan already handles more than 1,000 online food orders per day using the technology at a university campus in Shanghai.

The Beijing-based company said it will start large-scale operations of its driverless delivery vehicles by 2019.

“Meituan’s entry into autonomous delivery is a way of bolstering its competitiv­eness as emerging technologi­es including unmanned delivery will be the core engine driving its businesses in the future,” said Yang Xu, an analyst on life and services from consultanc­y Analysys.

Right now, many companies including e-commerce giant JD are developing autonomous delivery technologi­es. However, Yang noted that the commercial­ization of autonomous delivery remains a long way off.

Before this can be achieved, a number of problems including complicate­d road conditions, technologi­cal bottleneck­s, operating costs

and supervisio­n need to be dealt with, said Yang.

“In addition, related rules and regulation­s have yet to be issued,” added Yang.

Xia Huaxia, head of autonomous delivery at Meituan, said that its service would continue to rely on its delivery staff to some extent for quite some time into the foreseeabl­e future.

“Currently, autonomous vehicles will act as a supplement to our delivery staff, especially in late-night delivery, as unmanned vehicles can work round-the-clock,” he added.

Meituan’s entry into autonomous delivery is a way of bolstering its competitiv­eness ...” Yang Xu,

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