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Your next Uber Eats order could arrive by selfdrivin­g car or robot. What now for workers?

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Uber Eats launched two autonomous delivery pilots in Los Angeles on Monday which will deliver food without the need for human drivers.

According to a report by TechCrunch, the food delivery company is working with two US startups, Motional and Serve Robotics, to launch the pilot.

Motional, an autonomous ve-hicle company, originally announced a partnershi­p with Uber Eats in December 2021.

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Serve Robotics, a company spun out of Uber itself, makes delivery robots that can navigate pavements.

Limited trials will be introduced at first, with deliveries from a select few merchants, including the Kreation Organic Juicery.

Deliveries made by Serve Ro-botics will be confined only to short routes around the West Hollywood area of the city, whereas Motional will be in charge of longer delivery routes in Santa Monica.

Humans at drop off locations

"We'll be able to learn from both of those pilots what customers actually want, what merchants actually want, and what makes sense for delivery," a spokespers­on told TechCrunch.

Human operators will take con-trol near drop-off locations "to ensure a convenient and seamless experience for customers," a spokespers­on from Uber Eats said.

Uber will include the cost of food while charging customers for deliveries from both its partners.

However, autonomous vehicle deliveries in California require a permit that Motional reportedly doesn't possess, so it appears that customers won't be charged for deliveries from their vehicles, for now.

Uber Eats reached annual rev-enue of $8.3 billion (€ 7.92 billion) in 2022 and surpassed $30 billion (€ 28.52 billion) in gross bookings by 2020, according to Business Insider.

The company is known for us-ing automation and innovative technology in their services, with expansion of automated delivery their likely next step.

How will this impact workers’ rights?

The recent announceme­nt has raised concerns for gig economy workers and worker’s rights activists.

"Uber Eats couriers across the globe face poverty pay and abysmal working conditions, in the UK lacking basic rights such as holiday pay and pensions,” Alex Marshall, President of the Independen­t Workers Union of Great Britain, told Euronews.

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“It is not surprising to see Uber Eats invest millions of dollars in automated delivery robots, given that it fails to treat its workers as human beings".

Long-awaited draft legislatio­n by the European Commission was published last year, ordering that the process of confirming employment status should to shift to companies, rather than burdening individual­s that work for them.

“It is not surprising to see Uber Eats invest millions of dollars in automated delivery robots, given that it fails to treat its workers as human beings". Alex Marshall President, Independen­t Workers Union of Great Britain

Before then, gig economy workers like workers for Uber Eats had to go to court to prove they were employees, or risk being denied basic rights.

"AI and adoption of new tech-nologies, in general, has an impact on how work is done as some tasks can be [fully] automated," Camilla Lenzi, an associate professor of urban economy from Politecnic­o di Milano working on an EU-funded project that investigat­es how technology influences labour markets in Europe, told Euronews Next.

"Will AI kill or promote the gig economy, will it steal or create jobs from delivery workers for instance? It’s too early to say - this is a new technology which has not disclosed its full potential yet".

"What we see in our research so far is that in the EU new technologi­es have not fully replaced jobs. Many skilled jobs can be under threat while low skilled [labour] can expand".

Euronews Next has ap-proached Uber Eats for comment.

 ?? ?? Uber Eats launched two autonomous delivery pilots in Los Angeles.
Uber Eats launched two autonomous delivery pilots in Los Angeles.

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