The Mercury News Weekend

TECH DELIVERS

As online shopping boom continues, shippers using automation, software in hopes of trimming down the miles

- By Daniel Moore Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

PITTSBURGH — Around 8 a.m. at a cavernous warehouse outside Pittsburgh recently, about four dozen delivery drivers for United Parcel Service got their first look at the scheduled drop-offs for the day.

Prepping for roughly ninehour shifts with anywhere from 50 to 150 stops, it could have been — and, until recently, was — a daunting start, as drivers had to calculate how best to juggle the day’s load while negotiatin­g traffic snarls such as bridges, tunnels and sudden road closures.

But as the drivers did their stretches and huddled for a morning pep talk, they stopped to consult a computer screen. It told them precisely what route to take to make each delivery and what time they would get there.

UPS has been expanding its use of the technology that it hopes could save 100 million miles a year from the shipping company’s treks around America’s cities and neighborho­ods. Big shippers like UPS and FedEx Ground have been embracing tracking data as a way to cope with and grow with the prolonged boom in online shopping, even as they work to give customers more specific options for home delivery.

“As technology has evolved, so has what we scan,” said Kevin Koken, vice president of the FedEx Ground’s eastern region, which covers the New England and mid-Atlantic areas. He noted that FedEx developed the first bar code used for shipping purposes in 1985.

Online sales have grown at a faster rate than those from brickand-mortar stores, and sales this November and December are expected to follow that trend, according to the National Retail Federation. The Washington, D.C., trade group expects online sales to rise by 6 to 8 percent to as much as $105 billion, compared with retail stores’ growth

UPS has expanded its use of technology that it hopes will save 100 million miles a year fromthe shipping company’s treks around U.S. cities.

of 3.7 percent to $630.5 billion.

The shift hasn’t always gone smoothly for delivery companies — just two years ago, stories about delayed Christmas deliveries grabbed headlines. This year, FedEx expects a record 317 million shipments between Black Friday and Christmas Eve across its global network, a 12.4 percent increase in seasonal volume. UPS is forecastin­g a Thanksgivi­ng through December delivery volume of more than 630 million packages, up more than 10 percent from 2014.

The ground division of Memphis-based FedEx has increased levels of automation at some of its 31 hub facilities across the U.S. and Canada.

A key feature that management is excited about is a system that sends packages by conveyor belt through a six-sided “scanning tunnel” that tracks everything from package dimensions to weight and makes sorting decisions in about half a second.

The package then is directed using automatic sorters to its appropriat­e destinatio­n in the hub, where workers then load it onto a FedEx van for delivery. The goal is to minimize the number of times a human touches a package, Koken said.

“Each time you touch a package, you introduce the possibilit­y of an error,” he said. “A computer in that same situation makes the right decision almost every time.”

Each morning around 3:30 a.m., at a UPS facility in suburban Pittsburgh, packages are carried from tractor-trailers and put onto conveyor belts along a network of massive metal chutes that feed two main belt lines.

Under low-hanging bright lights, preload workers pick packages off the central belt lines and use bar codes to tell them which of about four dozen delivery trucks to load the goods into. On that particular morning, the center handled roughly 15,600 packages, said Walt DeMase, a preloading supervisor.

The new routing technology for delivery trucks, called Orion, will be used on 70 percent of the company’s U.S. routes this holiday season, up from 45 percent last year at this time. For each 120-stop route, the algorithm analyzes more than 200,000 options in selecting the most efficient route, the company said.

Last year, drivers with the technology showed a reduction of 6 to 8 miles per route driven, resulting in lower fuel use and related vehicle emissions, said UPS spokeswoma­n Susan Rosenburg. Once rolled out completely, UPS expects drivers to shave off 100 million miles. UPS doesn’t disclose the total number of miles its trucks drive a year.

DeMase, a former delivery driver, remembers when he had to use paper maps to figure out routes. After being assigned the same delivery area on most days, drivers became “creatures of habit,” he said.

“Orion shows us a better way of doing that,” DeMase said.

 ?? BOB DONALDSON/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE PHOTOS ?? Above: Drivers at the UPS depot in Jackson, Pa., consult a computer for their routes before leaving on the day’s deliveries. Top: Using a handheld delivery tracking device, UPS driver Andrew Hancock checks the load before leaving on his route.
BOB DONALDSON/PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE PHOTOS Above: Drivers at the UPS depot in Jackson, Pa., consult a computer for their routes before leaving on the day’s deliveries. Top: Using a handheld delivery tracking device, UPS driver Andrew Hancock checks the load before leaving on his route.
 ??  ?? Drivers start the day with some light stretching before getting the daily performanc­e update and safety briefing at the UPS depot in Jackson, Pa.
Drivers start the day with some light stretching before getting the daily performanc­e update and safety briefing at the UPS depot in Jackson, Pa.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States