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Yamato and DeNA test autonomous delivery system in Japan

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A self-driving delivery vehicle moves down a closed-off street during an experiment by Yamato Transport Co. and DeNA Co. in Fujisawa, Kanagawa Prefecture, on Tuesday. | KAZUAKI NAGATA
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On Tuesday, Yamato Transport Co. and DeNA Co. tested an autonomous vehicle delivery service to gauge the potential of self-driving technology in the field of logistics.

The two Tokyo-based companies conducted the experiment in Fujisawa, Kanagawa Prefecture, in which an electric car navigated through a short, quarantined road without anyone sitting in the driver’s seat. A person sat in the front passenger seat to observe the operation.

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During one demonstration, the vehicle, equipped with a camera and infrared sensor, ran through the residential area at 5 to 10 kph. When the delivery car arrived at its destination, a customer opened up a box inside the vehicle, allowed a QR code on her smartphone to be scanned, and picked up the product.

Yamato and DeNA, a smartphone game-maker, ran a delivery service experiment in Fujisawa between April 2017 and March this year in which a human drove the delivery car but with no face-to-face interaction between the driver and clients.

The project encompassed about 61,000 city residents and enabled them to pick up products at any location in the designated area and choose the time of their liking.

This was to test how such deliveries would go, as it would likely be the most common method if the self-driving delivery system becomes widespread.

As the experiments wrap up, the two firms tested driverless delivery for the first time on Tuesday. By law, a human is supposed to remain behind the wheel, but for this project Yamato and DeNA got permission from the police, who blocked the road for the driverless test.

The 11-month experiment was useful and provided some new insights to Yamato, said Kazuo Hatakeyama, who heads the firm’s equipment management department.

Typically, delivery car drivers are male workers in their 20s to 40s, as the job involves carrying heavy packages, but with the self-pickup method, drivers can be women and seniors, he said.

The surge of package deliveries brought on by online shopping has been vexing domestic couriers struggling from labor shortages. The two firms said self-driving delivery could help the situation.

Hatakeyama said Yamato will review the experiment by the end of May and will think of how it wants to proceed with the self-driving delivery business.

DeNA has been eager to seek growth opportunities in the automotive business. The company is also partnering with Nissan Motor Co. for a self-driving taxi service.

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