Boston Dynamics’ warehouse robots are taking over 

“Stretch” will be going to work for DHL, one of the biggest logistics companies in the world.
Subscribe to Freethink on Substack for free
Get our favorite new stories right to your inbox every week

Boston Dynamics has just secured the first customer for its autonomous warehouse robots — and it’s one of the biggest logistics companies in the world. 

The challenge: People had been buying more stuff online prior to 2020, but the pandemic accelerated the trend — in 2019, eCommerce accounted for less than 14% of all retail sales, but in 2021, it made up nearly 20%.

More online orders means more warehouses to receive, store, and distribute the goods. But retailers have had trouble staffing those facilities — the work is physically demanding, sometimes with long hours and low pay — and staffing shortages can lead to delays for customers.

More than 80% of warehouses have yet to embrace any sort of automation.

Warehouse robots: In March 2021, Boston Dynamics unveiled Stretch, a warehouse robot that is essentially one giant arm that rolls around on a pallet-sized base. The arm is equipped with a gripper that can latch onto boxes from the top or side to move them.

Stretch works autonomously using a computer vision system that allows it to identify boxes of different shapes and sizes, even when they’ve fallen or are stacked haphazardly. In a single hour, it can move up to 800 boxes weighing up to 50 pounds each.

What’s new: Boston Dynamics has now signed a $15 million deal with logistics company DHL Supply Chain to deliver a fleet of the warehouse robots. 

The bots will be deployed at multiple DHL warehouses across North America over the next three years, with the first deliveries expected in the spring of 2022.

It’s not clear yet how many warehouse robots are in a “fleet,” so we don’t know exactly how much DHL is paying for each Stretch, or if DHL is buying the robots outright or leasing them.

Stretch can move 800 boxes, each weighing up to 50 pounds, in one hour.

The big picture: More than 80% of warehouses have yet to embrace any sort of automation, according to a new Research and Markets report, but the fulfillment industry is starting to look hard at robots as a solution to staffing woes. 

If Boston Dynamics’ warehouse robots prove to be a financially viable solution to DHL’s labor shortage, we could see more Stretches entering the workforce in the near future.

We’d love to hear from you! If you have a comment about this article or if you have a tip for a future Freethink story, please email us at tips@freethink.com.

Subscribe to Freethink on Substack for free
Get our favorite new stories right to your inbox every week
Related
A memo from the future
In the world of 2069, humans have more reach, more speed, and more leverage than any previous generation.
Retro Biosciences wants to add 10 healthy years to your life
Backed by $180 million in funding from OpenAI’s Sam Altman, Joe Betts-LaCroix’s Retro Biosciences is racing to extend the human healthspan.
AI deadbots can keep “you” around after death — what does that mean for the living?
We can now use AI to create versions of real people that can live on long after their bodies die. But should we?
The AI vibe shift: From doom to realism
Existential anxiety surrounding AI is giving way to more realistic concerns about its potential impact on the workforce and beyond.
AI will never be a shortcut to wisdom
Real understanding, argues thought leader Jeff DeGraff, doesn’t come from outputs — it comes from practice.
Up Next
Exit mobile version