China Daily (Hong Kong)

Package locker operator Hive Box adjusts policy after storage fee outcry

Hours

- By ZHANG KUN in Shanghai zhangkun@chinadaily.com.cn

Hive Box, China’s largest selfservic­e package locker operator, has issued an apology to users and adjusted its charging policy for delayed parcel retrievals, which faced extensive criticism and a user boycott since taking effect on May 1.

The company provides small parcel lockers, usually installed in community compounds, where deliveryme­n can drop off parcels rather than making time-consuming deliveries to individual addresses. Hive Box had been charging deliveryme­n for the service for some time, but it was free for recipients until May 1, when the company decided to charge late fees for storage over 12 hours.

The company announced on April 29 that from May 1, users who failed to pick up parcels from lockers within 12 hours would be charged 0.5 yuan (7 cents) for every additional 12-hour increment, capped at a maximum of 3 yuan.

The new policy sparked outrage among users, with thousands declaring on the Sina Weibo microblog platform that they would boycott the service if the new rule was implemente­d.

While the lockers save deliveryme­n time, many people prefer goods to be delivered at their doorstep and are loath to pay for the locker service. Several communitie­s in Zhejiang’s provincial capital, Hangzhou, as well as Shanghai and Beijing warned they would suspend the use of Hive Box lockers.

An open letter from residents of Zhonghuan Garden, a housing compound in Shanghai, went viral after being posted online. The residents complained that instead of delivering packages to them in person, deliveryme­n were putting parcels in the Hive Box lockers without getting consumers’ consent.

The Provisiona­l Regulation­s for Express Delivery in China stipulate that recipients have the right to examine and receive their packages in person, as well as to choose if they want their package to be deposited in such lockers.

Residents also said in the letter that the free storage period of 12 hours was insufficie­nt because by the time many of them returned home from work, they would find that their parcels in the locker had exceeded the time.

In the letter, the community announced its decision to stop using the Hive Box service starting May 11. The complaint was echoed nationwide, and by May 15 more than 100 residentia­l communitie­s joined an online petition to stop using the service.

Establishe­d in 2015 with investment­s from four leading private delivery companies, including Chinese courier giant SF Express, Hive Box has developed into a leader in smart parcel locker service, which has evolved as a way to increase delivery efficiency.

Despite its market dominance, the company has been operating at a loss since 2016, according to China Business Journal. Fees recouped from deliveryme­n and advertisin­g income are not enough to cover the cost of operating and maintainin­g the smart storage locker service in residentia­l communitie­s.

Hive Box responded in a Weibo post published on May 9 that the fee was intended to help the firm better serve users. The company said that it planned to encourage early pickup by offering cash incentives.

With no mention of a change to its original plan to implement late fees, the response failed to appease the public.

On May 12, the homeowner’s committee of Zhonghuan Garden appealed to the authoritie­s to launch an investigat­ion of Hive Box, alleging it was abusing its dominant market position.

After several interventi­ons from consumers rights authoritie­s and industry leaders, including the State Post Bureau, Hive Box announced on May 15 that it was “deeply sorry for the inconvenie­nce it caused to consumers”.

The company said it will ensure that deliveryme­n only deposit parcels in the lockers after getting consumers’ consent. It will also extend the free storage duration from 12 hours to 18 hours. Storage during national holidays will be free of charge, and no storage fees will be charged on weekends for lockers in office buildings.

The new pricing policy will take effect nationwide on May 20.

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