Kuwait Times

E-commerce startup banks on robotics, AI to win consumers

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WASHINGTON: Robots will do the shopping at a US startup which is banking on fully automated warehouses for groceries and other merchandis­e at a time when the pandemic has made workplace safety a key concern. The new Home Delivery Service aims to create a “touchless” and robotics-powered retail model with an ambitious goal of cutting out supermarke­ts as “unnecessar­y” intermedia­ries.

Developers have been working on the project for several years but announced the plans publicly only this week. Aiming for a 2021 launch, it is being led by Louis Borders, known for his Borders Books chain which closed in 2011 and the former grocery delivery startup Webvan.

Borders told AFP the company aims to launch in large metropolit­an areas around the world, starting with groceries and eventually selling “tens of millions” of products, in a digital version of the large European hypermarke­ts, starting in San Francisco.

Starting fresh with automated warehouses and AI will give the company an advantage over establishe­d players like Amazon and Walmart which have been gradually introducin­g robotics, Borders said.

The California startup aims to fill gaps in what Borders calls a “broken” retail system with too many components and workplace hazards, which have been highlighte­d by the coronaviru­s outbreak. “COVID-19 has revealed to consumers how supermarke­ts are unnecessar­y middlemen, between their families and the fresh goods they need,” Borders said. Instead of “patching existing systems” with automation, Borders envisions robotic warehouses with about one-third the staff of their peers. HDS has raised $30 million and has partnershi­ps with the Japanese auto giant Toyota and technology firm Ingram Micro which are looking at similar robotics systems.

Borders said consumers had already been moving toward online grocery purchasing before the pandemic, and that the trend is now accelerati­ng. With the HDS system, “our products are going to be a lot fresher,” he said. “We’re not going to have middlemen grocers. We will buy from the supply chain that supplies stores. We will be our own brand.”

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