The trend of Outdoor Autonomous Vehicles encapsulates the variety of self-driving vehicles operating primarily outside on land or water, both within private property and on public rights of way. This trend focuses on vehicles that are either completely driverless or at least highly automated with occasional control by a human driver.
Bolstered by rapid developments in artificial intelligence (AI), edge computing, and sensor technologies, self-driving vehicles have come closer to reality in recent years with all modes of highly automated vehicle making an appearance on the market and fully automated vehicles making test debuts.
Successful examples include autonomous delivery robots created by the Estonian robotics company, Starship Technologies which accomplished over 6 million autonomous deliveries by January 2024, reflecting a steady growth trajectory since commercial launch in 2017.
The Outdoor Autonomous Vehicles trend will have high impact in logistics as it will significantly change the operational tasks performed by human workers and alter the way that customers interact with logistics providers in the last mile and elsewhere. Overall, this trend’s realization, however, is quite distant. While implementation has already begun with some use cases on private, gated properties, autonomous driving on public rights of way requires societal confidence. It will take more time before people trust fully autonomous technology and regulations permit unhindered application on a global scale.
Enabling technologies for this trend are improving, particularly in terms of sensors and navigation, but adoption is delayed by regulations, cost, and safety concerns. Outdoor autonomous vehicles are therefore about six or seven years away from wide spread adoption in logistics, and experts anticipate greater scaling across geographies within 10 years. The impact of these vehicles is likely to be high, especially within countries facing high labor costs and workforce shortages.