Santa Claus is getting a bunch of help from robots this Christmas, as one of the world’s biggest supply-chain companies rushed to add automation to its US operations ahead of the holiday season.
DHL’s supply-chain unit doubled its use of robots in the US this year and now has about 1,500 picking items at its warehouses around the country, on top of adding 15,000 seasonal workers, Oscar de Bok, chief executive of the unit, said.
It has helped the parcel-delivery company to stay up to date with orders, despite bottlenecks and higher labor costs.
“The supply-chain disruption that we’re seeing at the moment is not a one-time thing,” Mr de Bok said. “Because of the growth of e-commerce, supply chains are now organized differently because you get major hops and jumps at the end of the supply chain because that’s the end-consumer. All the stores and the wholesalers and distributors that used to be in between are now less, and that’s why you get more disruptions in supply chains.”
The unit of Deutsche Post started ramping up for the holiday season early, Mr de Bok said, allowing it to add the 15,000 workers. The hiring surge came with a cost, though, with wages rising as much as 15 percent in some parts of the US.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Technology Express staff and is published from a syndicated feed)