Post Inquiry
You are here:Home > News > Company News > Detail

Forklift Drivers Wanted: Can Work Remotely

2021-04-06 10:37 Kind:转载 Author:Ira Boudway Source:Ira Boudway
Statement:尊重合法版权,反对侵权盗版,若本网有部分文字、摄影作品等侵害了您的权益,在此深表歉意,请您立即将侵权链接及侵权信息邮件至我们的版权投诉邮箱:marketing@forkliftnet.com,我们会尽快与您联系并解决,谢谢您的配合.
Logistics provider Geodis is partnering with Phantom Auto to implement technology that enables remote operations.A Phantom Auto forklift...

Logistics provider Geodis is partnering with Phantom Auto to implement technology that enables remote operations.

A Phantom Auto forklift driving console.

Photographer: Francois Bouriard/Geodis/REA

Logistics giant Geodis SA says it plans to begin using remote-operated forklifts in its warehouses. The Paris-based company announced early Wednesday that it has formed a partnership with Silicon Valley start-up Phantom Auto to supply tele-operations. The two companies began working together in 2019 to test remote-operated forklifts in a warehouse in Le Mans, France. With that pilot successfully concluded, Geodis is working on a plan to deploy the technology commercially, according to Stéphanie Hervé, the company’s chief operation officer for Western Europe, the Middle East and Africa. “We need to do it step by step,” said Hervé in a call last week. “We will not replace everything at one time.”

Phantom Auto’s technology allows “digital drivers,” as Geodis calls them, to sit at a console and operate a forklift from thousands of miles away. “I am here in my office in Paris,” said Hervé, “And I can see the warehouse with a 360-degree view. I hear everything. I have a steering wheel. I have pedals. And I can drive the forklift.”

Founded in 2017, Phantom originally planned to provide remote assistance for fleets of self-driving cars, but has found more immediate use for its technology in logistics and delivery. In the U.S., remote operators use Phantom’s system to help food delivery robots navigate bumpy sidewalks and to tow trailers from dock to dock at shipping yards. 

A forklift operates remotely in a Geodis warehouse in Le Mans, France.

Photographer: Jean Claude Moschetti/Geodis/REA

German manufacturer Kion Group plans to build forklifts under its Fenwick brand that will be enabled to run Phantom Auto’s software. Geodis would then purchase the forklifts from Kion and pay Phantom a fee for the software. “We call what we do forklift-as-a-service,” said Phantom co-founder Elliot Katz. The remote operators would work for Geodis, which operates in 67 countries.

Booming e-commerce, said Hervé, has made finding forklift drivers difficult, especially for work sites that are far from cities. She expects remote operations will help the company to recruit and retain workers from a wider pool of applicants, including the disabled. “It’s really to make our jobs attractive for young talent and digital natives,” said Hervé. Phantom’s system also allows for efficiency gains — the same driver can move pallets in Marseille in the morning and in Avignon in the afternoon — as well as greater safety, as drivers will be far removed from any mishaps.

Net Friend Comment
Speak rationally. No advertising.

Relevant Info

Recommended Pictures