San Antonio Express-News

Automated cashier-less store opens in Middle East

- By Isabel Debre

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The Middle East got its first completely automated cashier-less store last week, as retail giant Carrefour rolled out its vision for the future of the industry in a cavernous Dubai mall.

Like Amazon’s breakthrou­gh unmanned grocery stores that opened in 2018, the Carrefour mini-market looks like any ordinary convenienc­e store, brimming with sodas and snacks, tucked between sprawling storefront­s of this city-state.

But hidden among the familiar fare lies a sophistica­ted system that tracks shoppers’ movements, eliminatin­g the checkout line and allowing people to grab the products they’ll walk out with. Only those with the store’s smartphone app may enter. Nearly a hundred small surveillan­ce cameras blanket the ceiling. Countless sensors line the shelves. Five minutes after shoppers leave, their phones ping with receipts for whatever they put in their bags.

“This is how the future will look,” Hani Weiss, CEO of retail at Majid Al Futtaim, the franchise that operates Carrefour in the Middle

East, told The Associated Press. “We do believe in physical stores in the future. However, we believe the experience will change.”

The experiment­al shop, called Carrefour City+, is the latest addition to the burgeoning field of retail automation. Major retailers worldwide are combining machine

learning software and artificial intelligen­ce in a push to cut labor costs, do away with the irritation of long lines and gather critical data about shopping behavior.

“We use (the data) to provide a better experience in the future … whereby customers don’t have to think about the next products they want,” Weiss said. “All the insights are being utilized internally in order to provide a better shopping experience.”

Customers must give Carrefour permission to collect their informatio­n, Weiss said, which the company promises not to share. But the idea of a vast retail seller collecting reams of data about shoppers’ habits already has raised privacy concerns in the United States, where Amazon now operates several such futuristic stores, known as Amazon Go. It’s less likely to become a public debate in the autocratic United Arab Emirates, home to one of the world’s highest per capita concentrat­ions of surveillan­ce cameras.

With the pandemic forcing major retailers to reassess the future, many are increasing­ly investing in automation — a vision that threatens severe job losses across the industry. But Carrefour stressed that human workers, at least in the short-term, would still be needed to “support customers“and assist the machines.

“There is no future without humans,” Weiss said.

 ?? Isabel Debre / Associated Press ?? A man uses a QR code on a mobile phone on Sept. 6 to enter Carrefour’s new cashier-less grocery store in Mall of the Emirates in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
Isabel Debre / Associated Press A man uses a QR code on a mobile phone on Sept. 6 to enter Carrefour’s new cashier-less grocery store in Mall of the Emirates in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

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