Amazon Unveils Warehouse Robot To Replace Human Pickers Amid Unionization Threats
Amazon Unveils Warehouse Robot To Replace Human Pickers Amid Unionization Threats
BY TYLER DURDEN SATURDAY, NOV 12, 2022 - 10:30 AM
The rise of automation
could be set to enter hyperdrive speed at Amazon warehouses nationwide in
response to Covid lockdowns, unionization, and the drive to improve margins via
reducing labor costs. Human order pickers could be replaced within this decade
by a new robotic arm that relies entirely on artificial intelligence and suction
cups to identify and fulfill customer orders.
Amazon unveiled the
"Sparrow" robot on Thursday," which can detect, select, and
handle millions of items in a warehouse to complete a customer order, rendering
a human picker obsolete.
"Leveraging computer vision and artificial intelligence
(AI), Sparrow can recognize and handle millions of items. Last year, with the
support of Amazon technologies, our employees around the world picked, stowed,
or packed approximately 5 billion packages—or over 13 million packages per
day," the company wrote in
a press release.
"It's a major leap in technology challenge, and technology development," Joe Quinlivan, a vice president of robotics and fulfillment technologies at the company, said during a press event unveiling the device. He said robots would replace the most repetitive-motion jobs in the future.
Suppose Sparrow is
widely deployed at fulfillment centers nationwide. In that case, this could
mean hundreds of thousands of warehouse workers will be jobless in the coming
years, if not by the end of the decade, as the company aims to automate
warehouses fully.
Automation aims to
prevent shutdowns of warehouses in another health crisis. It also drives down
mounting labor costs as workers fight to unionize.
Amazon's increased focus on robots indicates its master plan to reduce reliance on its human workforce. Meanwhile, for those workers trying to escape the warehouse hell of long hours and learning to code, well, the tidal wave of tech layoffs is even more bad news.
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