500,000 Jobs At Risk As Instacart Mulls Robot-Driven Warehouses
BY TYLER DURDEN TUESDAY, FEB 23, 2021 - 11:55
For the more than 500,000 Instacart gig workers fulfilling
grocery orders at supermarket chains such as Giant, Food Lion, Costco, among
others, the delivery service is exploring ways it can eliminate human workers
by employing robots at warehouses, according to a new report via Financial Times.
Anyone who straps on a mask, or now maybe two or three, and has shopped at a major grocery chain this year have noticed, many of whom, young millennials, running around the stores in green Instacart shirts, fulfilling orders.
While this innovative delivery service has been nothing but
stellar during the virus pandemic, the San Francisco-based startup has been
researching ways to automate the picking process.
"Last
spring, Instacart sent out proposal requests to at least five companies that
offer robotic systems that would pick goods from purpose-built "dark"
warehouses instead of store shelves," FT said.
Sources said, "Instacart had initially expressed a
desire to open as many as 50 robot-driven warehouses across the US in about a
year."
No deal has been struck with robotics makers to fulfill Instacart's
automation plans. This comes as Walmart and Amazon are entrenched in
an e-commerce delivery war where networks of robotic micro-fulfillment centers
are being developed around the country.
The source said there'd been a lack of interest from grocery
store players who have caught wind of Instacart's plans.
Brittain Ladd, a supply-chain consultant, said Instacart's
ultimate goal is to become an "online grocery retailer and leverage
micro-fulfillment centers to fulfill their orders. "
Instacart told FT that human workers would "continue to
play an important role" at the company.
"While
we have no updates to share today, we're constantly evaluating our services in
deep partnership with the nearly 600 retailers we work with. Instacart's entire
product and model is predicated on being a chief ally to our retail
partners."
We're
committed to supporting our brick-and-mortar partners and continuing to invest
in and explore new tools and technologies that support the needs of their
customers and further enable their businesses to grow and scale over the long
term."
What's troubling is that more than half a million people work
for Instacart. If a future rollout of Instacart automation is seen, this
will undoubtedly result in higher technological
unemployment.
Our
advice to readers - if you're in a low-skilled job that will be heavily
impacted by artificial intelligence and automation - now is the time to
retain for another job.
https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/instacart-mulls-robot-driven-warehouses-500000-jobs-risk
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