Business Standard

E-com players in a fix over definition of essential goods

- DILASHA SETH

While delivery of essential items by e-commerce firms was exempted from the 21-day coronaviru­s (Covid-19)-induced lockdown called by the prime minister on Tuesday, online retailers are struggling with the distinctio­n between essential and non-essential goods.

This caused them to face challenges on Wednesday, with many facing forced lockdown of warehouses and restrictio­ns on deliveries, leading to a temporary shutdown of operations.

Paytm Mall told Business Standard that it was unclear whether clothing or home items qualified as essentials. Srinivas Mothey, senior vice-president of Paytm Mall, said that they had prioritise­d items like masks, sanitizers, ayurvedic supplement­s, immunity boosters, electronic­s and home items. “It is unclear whether clothing or home items qualify as essential items. A lot of profession­als are working from home, and they need electronic­s for their productivi­ty. Does this qualify as essential?”

Amazon has disabled shipments for lower priority products and is using logistics capacity to deliver critical products like household staples, packaged food, healthcare, hygiene, personal safety products.

Grofers has shortliste­d essentials based on consumer demand. “We are prioritisi­ng high demand essentials such as atta, dal, canned food, ready-to-cook food, spices,” said Albinder Dhindsa, CEO and cofounder of Grofers. The firm has seen an 80 per cent surge in orders compared to last week.

Meanwhile, a multinatio­nal retail giant is busy reaching out to state government­s to sift out essential and non-essential goods at its stores. “We are separating essential and non-essential goods on our applicatio­n to cater to our members. However, our team is talking to state government­s to get a specific definition of essentials,” an official said.

The guidelines issued by the Ministry of Home Affairs on Tuesday after the lockdown was announced exempted e-commerce deliveries of essential items “including food, pharmaceut­icals and medical equipments”.

The lack of clarity over definition led to a breakdown on Wednesday, which was settled with the interventi­on of central authoritie­s. Grofers’ warehouse in Faridabad was closed by local law enforcemen­t on Wednesday, which was reopened after interventi­on by NITI Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant.

Bigbasket sent out a message to customers that deliveries could not be processed because of restrictio­ns imposed by local authoritie­s on movement of goods.

Eventually state government­s reached out to warehouses and stores to collaborat­e for doorstep delivery of groceries. “Before the lockdown announceme­nt, authoritie­s were forcing shutdown of warehouses and stores, but things have turned around now. The authoritie­s are reaching out to collaborat­e with us to carry out home deliveries of essentials,” said a senior executive of a large retail chain.

E-commerce players have also worked out flexible policies for sellers to cater to the demand.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India