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    Co-op expands robot delivery service across Leeds

    Co-op and Starship Technologies on Thursday (21) confirmed the expansion of autonomous online grocery deliveries across more neighbourhoods in Leeds in collaboration with Leeds City Council.

    Following a successful pilot launched last November – which saw 20,000 residents within the Adel and Tinshill area of Leeds have access to Starship’s delivery service – a further 12,000 households in communities in the Kippax and Swarcliffe areas of the City will now be able to access Co-op groceries delivered by robots quickly, easily and conveniently.

    Orders are placed through the Starship food delivery app, which is available for download on iOS and Android, with residents in Kippax and Swarcliffe able to choose from a wide range of groceries which are picked fresh from two local Co-op stores, and then delivered in the local community.

    Chris Conway, eCommerce Director, Co-op, said, “Co-op stores are well placed in the heart of local communities to provide quick, easy and convenient grocery home deliveries for time-pressed shoppers – whether that is a full shop or, for last-minute top-ups and forgotten items. We are committed to exploring new and innovative ways to increase access to our products and services, and delighted to be able to roll-out robot deliveries to provide further online flexibility and choice for consumers across Leeds.”

    Councilor Helen Hayden, Leeds City Council’s executive member for sustainable development and infrastructure, commented, “Residents and families of Adel and Tinshill have welcomed Starship robots delivering their groceries, with over three-quarters of survey respondents in support of the introduction of the robots in the area. The expansion to Kippax and Swarcliffe will mean more people in Leeds can benefit from a zero-carbon alternative to grocery deliveries. As a council we’re pleased initiatives like this can help towards reducing the emissions of the last-mile delivery journey – it helps us to meet our pledge of becoming a carbon neutral city by 2030 by aiming to reduce short journeys to the shops made by car.”

    Andrew Curtis, Director of European Operations at Starship Technologies, said, “The feedback we have received since first launching in Leeds last year has been overwhelmingly positive and we are pleased to be able to extend the benefits the robots have provided to an additional 12,000 homes from today. More and more people are conscious of trying to reduce their carbon footprint and our robots help with this by eliminating the need for short car journeys to pick up groceries.”

    Starship’s robots are powered by renewable electricity, with an average delivery for a robot consuming as little energy as boiling a kettle to make just one cup of tea.

    Today’s expansion in Leeds continues robot delivery growth across Yorkshire following the launch of the service with Co-op in areas of Leeds and, in Wakefield earlier this year. The robots are also familiar and popular sight in other locations across the UK, including Trafford (Greater Manchester), Milton Keynes, Northampton, Bedford and Cambridge.

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