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Driverless delivery and last-mile coverage

Driverless delivery for last-mile connectivity has started to gather steam over the past couple of years. With autonomous technologies moving out of nascent stages of development, delivery of goods has been recognised as a major application for this technology. This theme has been propelled further with the pandemic gripping the world, and leaving logistics and delivery systems stifled.

The shortage of personnel for delivery services, owing to pandemic-induced lockdowns and customer desires for contactless transactions, has led to a rapid increase in the adoption of driverless delivery services. The transformation also is the result of retailers needing to automate their delivery systems. According to the Deloitte Future of the Movement of Goods Survey1, 80 per cent of companies surveyed are either currently investing in or planning to invest in technologies like autonomous trucks or delivery drones/droids. Similar numbers represent the participants looking to leverage IoT and sensor data to drive automation. Driverless technology users utilise autonomous deliveries for two major purposes:

  • Delivery of goods from warehouses to stores and outlets for restocking inventory and shelves
  • Delivery of goods from stores to end consumers

While there has been significant progress in the adoption of this technology in the private sector, governments and authorities may not always keep pace with formulating legal frameworks to regulate the usage. Even mature markets like the United States and Europe, which have identified the key challenges posed by this technology, can consider doing more to create operating frameworks or regulations.

While driverless delivery technology has gathered momentum during the pandemic, it will easily outlast this period with both companies and consumers recognising and, already, reaping benefits from it.

 — Scott Rosenberger
(Global Transportation, Hospitality & Services sector leader)

Key trends

 

The use of driverless-delivery technology has diversified from a logistics solution for individual companies to an “as-a-service” option for multiple end-users. The players entering this segment come from eclectic backgrounds, including traditional users like big box retailers to technology companies.

Observations and trends from the last-mile driverless delivery ecosystem:

Urban warehousing: the key to unlocking the full potential of driverless delivery

  • The largest target audience for driverless delivery lies in urban regions. To fully automate delivery systems, companies are using urban warehouses to ensure that their autonomous vehicles can source products for delivery from locations closer to their destinations. This prevents them from travelling too far, reduces dependency on stores to fulfil orders, and thereby reduces the total number of journeys.

Partnerships are key for operations

  • Companies need to have one of three attributes to establish cross-sector partnerships most effectively; market potential, capital for R&D, or technical expertise to develop technologies. Therefore, it comes as no surprise that many large companies with both scale and capital are partnering with smaller tech firms to capitalise on their technical expertise.

Starting with college campuses as test markets is proving to be highly beneficial

  • For many driverless-delivery services, college campuses have become effective testing grounds for their ventures. Campuses provide a sizeable audience that is generally willing to adopt newer technologies, has little apprehension toward automation and often have fewer regulations and permits than in denser and more residential parts of metropolitan areas.

Food delivery: the major segment for driverless delivery

  • During the pandemic, one of the adversely affected segments within home delivery was food delivery done by delivery agents. Companies became more interested in using autonomous delivery to reduce the need for human contact, thus reassuring consumers of the hygiene status of the product getting delivered.2

No company has reached large scale commercialisation (which is likely to continue)

  • Expansion of autonomous vehicles (AVs) will likely be gradual and will happen region-by-region in specific categories of transportation. While there are examples of small-scale adoptions, there are no clear market leaders in the segment.

Overcoming challenges and optimising last-mile autonomous delivery

Challenge


Potential solutions


Impact/benefit


Emissions hindering sustainability goals

  • Use of electric vehicles for driverless delivery
  • Reducing the number of round trips for sourcing and delivery

Most AVs are electric-powered, helping to reduce emissions.

A proper driverless delivery ecosystem will reduce the number of fulfilments for these vehicles and reduce fuel consumption.

Inaccessibility

  • Use of drones for delivering goods in places without proper connectivity or infrastructure
  • Using comparatively compact vehicles for better urban navigation

Even before the pandemic, remote regions of the world were using drone delivery for essential supplies. This system has further developed to deliver a wider variety of goods.

Driverless delivery vehicles have a shorter wheelbase (which are better equipped to manoeuvre through cities) and regular, pre-scheduled routes that avoid city congestion.

High delivery costs

  • Driverless vehicles reduce costs associated with maintaining a fleet of drivers
  • The routes are pre-determined and can be optimised for the delivery process 

Managing a fleet of drivers is dependent on availability, reliability, and cost, all of which is eliminated using driverless vehicles.

Driverless vehicles also reduce costs related to staffing and working more challenging night shifts.

Diminishing consumer confidence

  • Using driverless vehicles reduces the need for human contact
  • Greater confidence in delivery confidentiality
  • Higher precision in delivery timings

The pandemic has led people to seek the reduced human contact that driverless delivery provides.

AVs allow for higher traceability and accountability.

Region in focus: Growth traction by geography

Regional insight and takeaway:

While some factors driving autonomous delivery are similar across regions, certain factors are unique to specific geographies.

  • Europe is expected to register a CAGR of 19.4 per cent between 2021 and 20283. Growth drivers include a flourishing e-commerce sector and increasing utilisation of delivery drones for supplying medical products. 
  • North America is expected to grow at a rate of 19.8 per cent through 20283 with early adoption, extreme weather conditions and robotic delivery start-ups driving growth. 
  • The APAC region will grow by 18.1 per cent through 20283 with growth dependent upon the e-commerce and retail sectors.

REGIONAL REGULATORY FRAMEWORK

NORTH AMERICA


EU


APAC


The key focus areas are:

  • Product liability
  • Liability concerns related to cybersecurity, data privacy, and incident liability

A challenge for the US market is the lack of uniformity between federal and state laws. The same holds true for Canada (national and provincial laws). The US, for instance, has 34 different states implementing their own rules governing AVs.

The legislations centred around AVs are focused on

  • The presence of a human driver capable of taking control
  • Dedicated infrastructure lanes

Even though the majority of EU members are signatories to uniform legislation, countries like France, (where driverless vehicles will now come under the country’s highway code) and Germany (with plans of a transition from limited testing to full scale deployment of AVs on roads) are taking the lead to formulate distinct policies.4

Key focus areas consistent across the region:

  • Infrastructure readiness and traffic congestion
  • Insurance claim issues

The willingness to adopt AVs varies within APAC, from lenient to apprehensive, which is visible in their policies.

For example, Japan is showing more leniency with highly automated “level 4” AVs being allowed to operate without a human driver present in the vehicle

On the other hand, Philippines is cautious about the possibility of AVs on the roads as the current regulations do not address concerns associated with liability of incident that has led to apprehensions being shared by the insurance sector as well.5

 

Conclusion

 

Driverless delivery has been around long enough to suggest that it is more than just a technological blip on the supply-chain radar. With innovations involving data sensing and data mapping of geographical locations, this technology has the potential to become more precise and scalable. It is anticipated that the scope of the technology will continue to develop, with authorities recognising and even adopting it for wider use.

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