DHL Supply Chain to Use Collaborative Robots

The contract logistics company will pilot test LocusBots for order fulfillment within the life sciences sector at a Tennessee facility.

The contract logistics company will pilot test LocusBots for order fulfillment within the life sciences sector at a Tennessee facility.
The contract logistics company will pilot test LocusBots for order fulfillment within the life sciences sector at a Tennessee facility.

DHL Supply Chain, the Americas’ contract logistics and part of Deutsche Post DHL Group, will begin a pilot test using a collaborative, autonomous robotics solution within the life sciences sector at a facility in Tennessee in the next two months.

The robots, called LocusBots from Locus Robotics, will be tested as a picker companion for piece picking order fulfillment in the warehouse. LocusBots work collaboratively and safely alongside warehouse staff, helping to quickly locate and transport pick items, so pickers don’t have to push carts or carry bins.

“We believe it’s critical to identify and implement these types of advanced technology solutions in the warehouse so we can seamlessly improve our customers’ supply chains,” says Adrian Kumar, Vice President of Solutions Design, DHL Supply Chain North America. “DHL Supply Chain’s initial implementation of this pilot program within the life sciences sector will inform the potential for broader deployment across different parts of our business. This is a natural evolution of our robotics program.”

The pilot rollout will utilize different picking strategies with the LocusBots in the warehouse. It will also assess the robot’s ability to communicate with the picker and the warehouse management system, how it navigates the warehouse, and its overall versatility. The autonomous robot solution is expected to connect seamlessly within DHL Supply Chain’s existing warehouse infrastructure.

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