Amazon Unveils First ‘Fully Autonomous’ Warehouse Robot

Amazon unveiled its first ‘fully autonomous’ warehouse robot, Proteus.

Currently, the robots that Amazon has rolling around its warehouses must operate in a caged area away from employees, however, Proteus will be able to move freely in the warehouse as it can dodge obstacles.

The ecommerce giant announced in a blog post that Proteus would first be deployed in warehouses moving “GoCarts,” which is Amazon’s term for tall, wheeled cages containing packages that need to be moved around the warehouse.

Amazon did not reveal exactly when workers would see Proteus in their warehouses or how many would be deployed.

Proteus is built to improve “simple, safe interaction between technology and people,” Amazon claims.

Amazon receives widespread criticism for how many injuries are sustained in its warehouses, with over a thousand serious injuries at Amazon UK sites reported to health and safety bodies since 2016, according to trade union GMB.

The trade union revealed that 294 injuries were reported in the 2020/21 financial year, a rise from the 231 in the same period a year earlier.

This compares to 139 injuries being reported in the financial year 2016/2017.

Amazon’s site in Coalville had the highest number of injuries, reporting 95 over the last five years. Its Dunfermline site reported 93 and Manchester Sunbank Lane, 87, respectively.

The company introduced a range of new robots named after characters from TV programs “Sesame Street” and “The Muppets” to reduce injury rates inside warehouses.

Despite this, leaked internal data published by Reveal in 2020 showed robotic warehouses had higher rates of injury than warehouses that don’t use robots.

Reveal’s investigation suggested robotic warehouses have higher production quotas than non-robotic ones, meaning the physical strain on workers is greater.