The Peterborough Examiner

GM teams with Walmart for driverless delivery

Pilot project planned for Arizona, but could be expanded if successful

- DAVID WELCH BLOOMBERG

Walmart Inc. is about to team up with Cruise LLC, the selfdrivin­g car unit majorityow­ned by General Motors Co., to experiment with delivering customer orders using driverless vehicles.

Cruise’s robot-piloted cars will ferry orders to customers’ homes from a Walmart store in Scottsdale, Ariz., starting early next year, Tom Ward, the retailer’s senior vice president of customer product, said in a Tuesday blog post.

The pilot program — which may be expanded — marks a big step for both companies.

Walmart is fighting for market share with rival retail giant Amazon.com Inc., which recently bought self-driving vehicle startup Zoox Inc.

For GM’s Cruise unit, the partnershi­p provides a pathway into potentiall­y lucrative delivery services distinct from its primary focus on ride-sharing robotaxis.

Cruise is just the latest partner for Walmart, which has been doing similar self-driving car tests with Waymo, the autonomous unit of Google parent Alphabet Inc., and startup Nuro Inc. as well as drone delivery tryouts. The world’s biggest retailer is preparing for a future when shoppers don’t have to drive to the store, and it’s trying out a number of different technologi­es.

“We may be growing delivery options today, but we’re still experiment­ing with new ways we can use technology to serve customers in the future,” Ward wrote. “You’ve seen us test drive with self-driving cars in the past, and we’re continuing to learn a lot about how they can shape the future of retail.”

Walmart customers can place an order from the Scottsdale store and have it delivered, contact-free, via one of Cruise’s allelectri­c self-driving cars, Ward said. If the program works well, the two companies could expand it to other stores, said Cruise spokespers­on Ray Wert.

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