Amazon's Vulcan robot uses an arm with a camera and a suction cup to pick items from the retailer's warehouse storage pods. Courtesy AmazonTo think we were worried about AI replacing humans.
A new report in the
New York Times says Amazon—the second-largest employer in the U.S. with almost 1.2 million employees—is on the cusp of “replacing more than half a million jobs with robots.”
The ‘bots would allow the company to avoid hiring more than 160,000 U.S. employees it would otherwise need by 2027, according to documents viewed by the
Times, saving “about 30 cents on each item that Amazon picks, packs, and delivers to customers.”
Amazon reportedly aims to automate 75% of its operations.
The company’s execs certainly haven’t been shy about describing what robots could do for its sprawling commerce machine.
At
Fortune’s Brainstorm AI event in London this year, chief roboticist Tye Brady
was careful to say that its robotic breakthroughs—including ‘bots that can “feel” goods on warehouse shelves—wouldn’t replace long-serving human workers, but longstanding human tasks.
“We aim to eliminate … every menial, mundane, and repetitive job out there,”
he said, adding: “We will never run out of things to do for our employees. We want them to focus on higher-level tasks.”
—AN