DHL Supply Chain has expanded its collaboration with Locus Robotics, further digitalising its supply chain processes. By 2022, the logistics specialist plans to implement up to 2,000 assisted picking robots globally.
DHL Supply Chain believes the initial investments in assisted picking robots have proven effective in commercially scaled operations, and this multi-million dollar agreement will enhance DHL’s wider Accelerated Digitalization Strategy. The 2,000 robots the company plans to have operating by next year by far make it the largest customer of Locus Robotics worldwide. The assisted picking robots are mostly used in e-commerce or consumer warehouses to help with picking and inventory replenishment, thereby increasing efficiency and accelerating delivery processes.
“It is particularly important for us to be able to consistently optimise our supply chains – assisted picking robots are very effective in this respect,” commented Markus Voss, Global CIO & COO DHL Supply Chain. “So far, more than 500 assisted picking robots are already in industrial use in our warehouses in the USA, Europe and the UK. By the end of 2021, another 500 robots are to be added in a total of more than 20 locations. The collaborative picking technology has clearly proven its effectiveness and reliability in modern warehousing. More locations have already been identified with concrete implementation roadmaps for the remaining robots, which we will deploy in 2022. However, the overall potential for assisted picking robots in our DHL warehouses is much bigger, so we are confident that we will meet the targets we have set ourselves together with Locus Robotics”.
Further implementing these robots is one step in DHL Supply Chain’s Accelerated Digitalization Strategy. Assisted picking robots help reduce time spent on manoeuvring pushcarts through warehouses, lower physical strain on employees, and increase picking efficiency. Assisted picking robots display images of goods to be picked, calculate optimal navigation routes and reduce required training time. Also, they can be swiftly integrated into the warehouse system landscape via DHL Supply Chain’s Robotics Hub and are well received by staff. In addition, during peak operational periods the robots provide an optimal solution for capacity expansion as we can swiftly bring in more robots with minimal onboarding effort to the existing fleet.
“Our expanded partnership with DHL reflects the increasing demand for warehouse digitalisation worldwide to meet today’s exploding fulfilment challenges,” added Rick Faulk, CEO, Locus Robotics. “Locus is proud to be a valued technology resource that is helping DHL realise their strategic vision of digital transformation.”
The pandemic has accelerated the booming trend of e-commerce, which makes the labor- intensive picking process in e-fulfilment play an even bigger and more critical role in meeting high end-customers’ demands. These trends speeded up the introduction of new technologies and automation in various industries, but especially in warehousing. It has also shown what the ‘supply chains of the future’ may look like and that the world must quickly adapt to new challenges. DHL Supply Chain is constantly assessing which of the implemented technologies will make their way into the warehouses permanently in order to further optimise processes. In addition to these tangible robotic solutions, DHL Supply Chain relies on software and cockpit solutions that can provide real-time information on the status of the global service logistics network of their customers. Accessing the pool of big data and implementing algorithms and artificial intelligence has proven to be a game changer in global supply chain planning and will be rolled out further.
You can read more about Locus Robotics’ solutions for DHL Supply Chain in the June 2021 edition of Logistics Manager magazine. Click here to read the thoughts of Jon Hinton, Vice President – Solutions, DHL Supply Chain. Locus Robotics is exhibiting at IntraLogisteX on stand 802