The Columbus Dispatch

Amazon could be a game-changer

- By Steven Overly

Self-driving vehicles have yet to hit the road in a major way, but Amazon already is exploring the technology’s potential to change how your packages are delivered.

Amazon is the nation’s largest online retailer, and its decisions not only turn heads but influence the entire retail and shipping industries, analysts say. That means any foray into the self-driving arena — whether as a developer or customer — could have a significan­t effect on the technology’s adoption.

Amazon has assigned a dozen employees to determine how it can use the technology as part of its business, the Wall Street Journal reported Monday. It’s unclear what shape Amazon’s efforts will take or how far along they might be, although the company states it has no plans to create its own vehicles.

Neverthele­ss, the Amazon group offers an early indication that big companies are preparing for the technology’s impact.

Transporta­tion experts anticipate that self-driving cars will fundamenta­lly alter the way people get around and the way companies ship goods, changes that stand to disrupt entire industries and leave millions of profession­al drivers without jobs. The forthcomin­g shift has attracted the money and attention of the biggest names in the technology and automotive industries, including Apple, Uber, Google, Ford, General Motors and Tesla, among others.

In particular, the technology could make long-haul shipping cheaper and faster because, unlike human drivers, machines do not command a salary or require down time. That would be important to Amazon, whose shipping costs continue to climb as the company sells more products and ships them faster, according to its annual report. Amazon even invested in its own fleet of trucks in December 2015 to give the company greater control over distributi­on.

If Amazon adopts selfdrivin­g technology, it may push others to do the same.

“When Amazon sneezes, everyone wakes up,” said Satish Jindel, president of SJ Consulting Group, a transporta­tion and logistics advisory firm.

The company said it shipped more than 1 billion items during the 2016 holiday season.

An Amazon spokeswoma­n declined a request for an interview, citing a “long-standing practice of not commenting on rumors and speculatio­n.” The company’s chief executive, Jeffrey P. Bezos, owns The Washington Post.

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