Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Tesco to trial drone deliveries next month

TESCO, Britain's biggest retailer, has said that it would next month trial grocery home deliveries with drones as it experiments with different ways to reach more customers.

Chief Executive Dave Lewis said the pilot would take place in Ireland, where partner Manna already has a license to operate.


Food retailers across the globe have rapidly expanded their pick-up and delivery services in the face of the Covid-19 pandemic and several are following US giant Amazon in trialing drones.

Separately on Wednesday(9), Walmart, the world's biggest retailer that owns Asda in Britain, said it would run a pilot project for delivery of grocery and household products through drones, along with end-to-end delivery firm Flytrex.

"They (Manna) have already proven the capability, the question is how do we take that capability and apply it to Tesco and that's the detail that's been worked on now before we get to the trial," Lewis said during a webcast Tesco hosted on "disruptive innovation".

The supermarket group's innovation director Claire Lorains said the trial would focus on the delivery of just a few grocery items, such as forgotten recipe items, with deliveries made within 30 minutes to an hour of an order being made.

"We're really interested to see how drones could be part of the solution to deliver to our customers on-demand small baskets," she said, noting the small basket market in Britain was forecast to exceed 10 billion pounds ($13 billion) over the coming years.

"If our trial with Manna is successful, we really think there is an opportunity to reach many customers through our stores extending with a drones service," she said.

Lewis said Tesco had four innovation priority areas-food & drink products and technology; data; robotics and automation; and packaging.

Lewis, who last year declared the group's turnaround complete, is due to step down at the end of September and be replaced by Ken Murphy, formerly of healthcare group Walgreens Boots Alliance.

More For You

Starbucks appoints Amazon executive as new CTO

Anand Varadarajan

LinkedIn

Starbucks appoints Amazon's Anand Varadarajan as new chief technology officer

Highlights

  • Anand Varadarajan appointed Starbucks CTO, effective 19 January, after 19 years at Amazon.
  • IIT graduate to oversee tech transformation in stores to improve labour efficiency.
  • Appointment comes as Starbucks reports first quarterly sales gains in nearly 18 months.

Starbucks has named Anand Varadarajan as its new chief technology officer, effective January (19), as CEO Brian Niccol drives a technology overhaul aimed at making store operations more efficient.

Varadarajan joins the global coffee chain after spending 19 years at Amazon, where he led technology and supply chain operations for the company's worldwide grocery business. He replaces Deb Hall Lefevre, who stepped down in September, with Ningyu Chen serving as interim CTO.

Keep ReadingShow less