Automated Deliveries Could Generate up to $48.4 Billion in Revenue by 2030
Lux forecasts that the market for parcel delivery will grow from a total of 107 billion parcels delivered in 2019
The
rise in e-commerce is fueling rapid growth in parcel delivery volumes, a market
expected to grow to $665 billion by 2030. Consumers are increasingly expecting
parcels to be delivered quickly. This demand is driving companies to explore
using automated delivery technologies to cover the last leg of the delivery
journey. Lux Research’s new report, “Automating
the Last Mile,” predicts that automated last-mile deliveries will generate
up to $48.4 billion in revenue by 2030, even though automated deliveries will
only address 20% of all parcel deliveries.
Lux forecasts that the market for parcel delivery will grow from a total of 107
billion parcels delivered in 2019, generating $350 billion in revenue, to 289
billion parcel deliveries in 2030, generating $665 billion in revenue,
resulting in a combined annual growth rate (CAGR) of 9.5% in parcel count and
5.8% in market value. “Most of this e-commerce growth is expected to come from
Asia because China and India still have a relatively low amount of parcel
deliveries per capita,” said Lux Research Senior Analyst Chris Robinson.
Automated last-mile delivery technologies fall into four key categories:
drones, legged robots, wheeled robots, and autonomous vehicles. Of these, autonomous
vehicles paired with drones show the most promise, with Lux Research
expecting them to deliver more than 20 billion parcels a year by 2030. Drones
are currently limited to a small delivery radius, but this range can be
extended by deploying them from a moving autonomous vehicle. Drone deliveries
will be limited to uncongested rural areas, which have the lowest regulatory
barriers to aviation. Wheeled robots are easier to develop than autonomous
vehicles but are only feasible on college campuses where the incumbent delivery
method is walking or bicycling. These deliveries are expected to account for
only 1.5 billion deliveries annually by 2030.
“Robot-as-a-service business models are emerging in startups developing
last-mile automated delivery technologies,” said Lux Research Analyst Josh
Kern. “Large companies that can invest in and develop their own technologies
are not expected to use these services, but logistics companies and retailers
with no experience in robotics likely will.”
E-commerce companies globally have announced multibillion-dollar supply chain
investments aimed at promising faster deliveries. Fulfillment center workflow
optimizations, including automated picking and packing solutions, are crucial
for shortening delivery times. “Today this is mostly manual, but advancements
in robotic grippers, machine vision, and collaborative robotics are all
improving the ability to automate these tasks,” said Robinson. Full automation
is likely more than a decade away due to increased complexity and handling of
items.
For more information, you can download
the executive summary of the report here.
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