At the Meituan drone delivery collecting store in Longgang, Shenzhen, a drone recently laden with fruits from Pagoda took off. In the sweltering summer, cold lychee from 2 kilometres away is packaged and sent 7 minutes to customers. It is acknowledged that Meituan and Pagoda began working together in 2016. Pagoda’s latest effort in the fresh fruit delivery industry is the drone delivery service for fruit that was just introduced in Shenzhen. In Meituan’s drone business, Pagoda has also emerged as the first fruit chain retail brand. The ordering process for a drone delivery is essentially the same as a traditional delivery in terms of the on-site experience. Following the customer’s order placement, the in-store staff will arrange sorting and bagging, and the packing will be completed by specialists.
According to the predetermined route, the drone will transport the fruit to the designated smart pick-up cabinet and simultaneously send the pick-up code to the customer for pickup. “Our current seasonal fruit offerings include lychees, apricots, and winter jujubes. For the benefit of our clients, we will eventually add more goods, like fresh fruit salad mixes. The most pressing concern for users, according to Meituan, is whether the fruit is fresh. “The typical drone delivery service of “3 kilometres within 15 minutes” for fruit has the most value in drastically cutting the delivery time so that each piece of fruit may be served right away, which can significantly improve the experience of the recipient.
Meituan’s drone business has been been running in Shenzhen for about a year. In 10 villages and 4 business areas as of June 2022, it had covered more than 8,000 households and had carried out more than 58,000 user orders. Up to this point, Meituan’s drone delivery has partnered with more than ten brands in the fast food, beverage, high tea, and snack sectors, and it will continue to investigate new possibilities in the future.
As the number of solar farms in Australia grows, so does the controversy over heavy metals in solar panels and the difficulty of recycling them. Lynette LaBlack, a farmer in the Riverina region of southern New South Wales, has been questioning everyone who will listen with uncomfortable questions. She questioned Metka EGN regarding its solar […]
Read More →Irrigation covers only 5% of Australia’s tilled agricultural land but delivers 30% of total agricultural output. Agriculture utilises 50-70 percent of Australia’s annual water use, with irrigation accounting for 90 percent of that. Regulations and licences govern the vast bulk of irrigated water use. Irrigators require a permit to draw specific amounts of water from […]
Read More →How do you improve productivity and yield, while conserving precious water supplies? This is a question farmers across the globe have grappled with for decades, but a reputed company SupPlant is on a mission to provide them with the answer. The Israeli-based start-up is using agronomic algorithms, artificial intelligence and cloud-based technology to meet this […]
Read More →