Financial literacy training for Gen Z
CategoriesSustainable News

Financial literacy training for Gen Z

Spotted: There are worrying signs that a generational gap is opening when it comes to financial literacy. A recent survey by Investopedia, for example, found that only 31 per cent of Gen Z individuals – aged 18 to 25 – said they understood investing. And this age bracket also scored lowest of all the generations surveyed on their perceived knowledge of taxes, borrowing, insurance, and retirement.   

When they do consume financial education content, those in Gen Z rely overwhelmingly on the internet. And in another survey by the Current Account Switch Service in the UK, almost half of respondents between the ages of 18 and 24 reported that a TikTok influencer has helped them make a financial decision. This reliance on TikTok and other social media platforms is worrying given that credible bodies such as the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority have highlighted the dangers of heeding the advice of unregulated social media ‘fin-fluencers.’ 

Hoping to improve the financial literacy of young people is UK startup Prograd, one of several companies leveraging the engaging formats used by social media platforms to provide reliable financial information. 

Prograd’s free platform allows users to create personalised financial targets, and highlights earning, saving, and borrowing opportunities to help them meet those goals. These opportunities range from product discounts and job opportunities to savings accounts and credit cards from partnering organisations. The company’s AI-powered technology performs soft credit checks to highlight appropriate credit products without impacting the users’ permanent credit history. And to make finance understandable, key terminology is explained in simple, jargon-free language.  

In highlighting these ‘paths’ to fulfilling financial goals, Prograd acts as a broker (it may be paid a fee if one of its partners’ products is taken up through the platform). But what sets the startup apart is its slick Gen-Z-friendly user experience and its social-media-like ‘community’ through which users can interact with each other and watch snappy, short-form videos explaining important financial concepts.

In the archive, Springwise has spotted other innovations improving financial inclusion, including a free platform for unbanked communities and a banking platform that’s accessible to everyone.

Written By: Matthew Hempstead

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Quantifying the risks of AI applications
CategoriesSustainable News

Quantifying the risks of AI applications

Spotted: Artificial Intelligence (AI) is poised to solve some of the world’s major challenges. Yet, at the same time, the use of AI also poses novel risks for organisations, particularly in the lack of governance, risk management, and compliance frameworks around AI systems. Swiss startup Calvin Risk is ready to offer solutions that can help organisations turn knowledge of their AI risks into a competitive advantage.

Calvin Risk was spun off from ETH Zurich earlier this year. It has developed Calvin, a risk and auditing management platform designed to help developers overcome the lack of human accountability in commercial AI algorithms. Calvin includes auditing tools that allow companies to continuously monitor AI projects for ethical and regulatory implications.

The startup points out that while improving AI models can mitigate risks, these reports often lack the specificity necessary to translate these implications into tangible business outcomes. Calvin Risk hopes to bridge this gap by providing clear insights into the direct implications of AI on business operations, enabling companies to make informed decisions that align with their strategic objectives.

Initially, Calvin Risk is targeting the insurance, pharmaceuticals, and tech industries, which are all major users of AI, and the company already raised $1.5 million (around €1.36 million) in a pre-seed round at the end of last year. In the future, Calvin Risk will work to accommodate emerging AI technologies and adapt the platform to take into account the evolving regulatory landscape (such as the European Union’s AI Act), as well as wider integration capabilities with other AI development tools.

While Calvin Risk is devoted to managing the risk of AI use, Springwise has spotted many other innovative applications of AI in the archive. Some recent AI innovations include a platform that plugs the environmental data gap in Africa and an AI-powered management hub for sustainability data.

Written By: Lisa Magloff

Reference

Demand Response Technology: Key to Decarbonizing Multifamily
CategoriesSustainable News Zero Energy Homes

Demand Response Technology: Key to Decarbonizing Multifamily

As municipal and state regulations targeting carbon emissions in buildings slowly come online, multifamily building emissions are becoming most critical. These codes challenge owners, designers, facilities engineers, and even tenants to meet net zero commitments. Unfortunately, multifamily properties pose difficult obstacles to retrofitting with clean technologies and energy upgrades, given their split incentive between owners and tenants. One key is demand response technology, which lets homeowners and tenants voluntarily reduce energy use during grid emergencies.

For example, more than 30,000 New York City building owners must undertake energy transition upgrades to prepare for the city’s groundbreaking Local Law 97. The law propels New York City’s Climate Mobilization Act of 2019, which hopes to cut the city’s carbon emissions by 40% over the next 6 years. Starting in January 2024, these larger buildings must comply with mandatory greenhouse gas limits or face steep fines. Multifamily properties face the strictest rulings, as they comprise the largest energy consumption and overall contributions to carbon emissions.

Most of these buildings fail to comply with the new limits as they currently stand. Emissions reductions can only be achieved through building efficiency upgrades, like insulation; electrification of HVAC systems; and integration of smart home devices like thermostats. These properties demand research and widespread implementation initiatives as we head closer to 2024. First, owners and management companies must educate their tenants on the necessary changes and encourage them to play an active role in their building’s energy transition.

Demand response technology offers split incentives

How can multifamily properties overcome split incentives for making energy consumption changes and meeting emissions regulations? The primary answer lies with DR platforms, which provide financial incentives to both building owners and tenants. When electricity usage across a community spikes, utility companies are often forced to turn to polluting, fossil fuel–powered “peaker plants” to meet the excess demand. This leads to a mass increase in both carbon emissions and the cost of producing electricity–as well as local pollution.

image of smartphones showing energy management/demand response app - photoDemand response (DR) technology and pricing programs have proven to reduce energy consumption during peak periods, benefiting both local utility and the environment. Some DR programs allow utilities and grid operators to directly tap into participating customer assets, like energy storage systems, to use stored energy to support the grid. Other programs use customer engagement tactics, like alerts via app to encourage the resident to voluntarily reduce energy use themselves to help lower the peak.

Tenants and owners can receive direct cash payments from utility companies for participating. Most often, residents shift their energy consumption during peak demand times. This could be as simple as turning off a few lights or raising thermostats by a few degrees during warmer weather. These simple actions—multiplied across a city or region—add up! Collectively, they balance the strain on the grid and reduce the need for utilities to resort to peaker plants.

Automation makes it easy

Demand response technology can activate smart home devices deployed at scale in apartments, condos, and co-ops, to automatically adjust energy consumption during a grid event: thus creating “virtual power plants” (VPPs). Groups of residents living in the same building, or even spread across an entire utility territory, using the same DR platform represent a potentially significant amount of flexible energy use. When called upon to support the grid during times of high demand, their combined load reduction could offset several tons of CO2 emissions, or even negate the need for a utility to fire up a peaker plant. Utility companies benefit by cutting costs and emissions.

DR technologies also allow utility companies and building owners to compile data. Dashboards show how and when buildings are using energy, which can then be used to understand how energy is being used, further adjust schedules, and assess impact of reducing or shifting energy use. Access to data is instrumental for buildings and utility companies to understand existing emissions levels, manage energy usage, and maintain or achieve compliance after emission caps are instituted.

 

modern affordable housing project - exterior photo

 

How can multifamily properties participate in DR?

To help building owners get started with these DR technologies, rebates (most recently via the Inflation Reduction Act) can support investments in energy efficient capital improvements with smart load management. Tax incentives and rebates provide owners with a more accessible path to lower energy costs for themselves and residents, and reduce carbon emissions building-wide. Building owners can also take advantage of regional programs that provide financing for upgrading buildings. In New York for example, owners can participate in this local funding facility to accelerate VPP projects and overall decarbonization.

As climate laws similar to Local Law 97 pop up across the country, multifamily properties are adopting necessary DR technologies and encouraging changes among residents. The appliances and tools that multifamily buildings will need to meet emissions rulings and other climate laws are available now. Ultimately, owners must take control of their energy usage and include residents on the journey to a cleaner future, for their building and community.

The author:

Jeff Hendler serves as CEO and co-founder of Logical Buildings,

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Turning rainforests into tangible ESG assets
CategoriesSustainable News

Turning rainforests into tangible ESG assets

Spotted: Since 1947, the total area of tropical rainforests has been reduced by more than half, with around 100 acres of rainforest cleared every minute for agricultural and industrial development. Now, one organisation – Forestbase – has an idea about how to significantly slow this process by valuing forest land much higher.

Forestbase founder and CEO Kjell Clarysse points out that most forest land is priced so low that it is the main driver for deforestation, with buyers able to make high profits turning the forest land into timber, mining, agriculture, or tourism. Instead, Clarysse suggests moving conservation away from a donation basis and into financial markets as an infrastructure asset.

First, Forestbase buys tropical forest land when it becomes available, outbidding extractive and environmentally damaging industries. Then, in collaboration with local communities, Forestbase establishes a conservation plan that is mutually beneficial for locals and the land.

In order for the bought land to be turned into a formal infrastructure asset, Forestbase built its own legal assessment tool, the Land Tenure Stability Index (LTSI). The company then sets up special purpose vehicles (SPVs) for the land it buys. Investors can buy shares of the SPV, which equates to the number of hectares of land purchased, and this asset can be used to meet environmental, social, and governance (ESG) goals. Because the ownership of the land has been fractionalised and spread over multiple land titles, it de-risks the purchase for investors and makes the assets easier to trade.

By turning hectares of rainforest into tangible assets, Forestbase brings the price of the land much closer to its intrinsic worth, taking into account the value of the biodiverse ecosystem that exists in one block of land. The ultimate goal is to drive up the price of rainforest to the point where it is more profitable to trade it than to exploit it. As Clarysse summarises, the company is “re-calibrating the position of nature in our financial system”.

Forestbase is currently focusing on increasing its asset financing capacity.  

A variety of novel financial products and markets are working to improve sustainability. In the archive, Springwise has spotted CO2 insurance products and fossil fuel-free funds.

Written By: Lisa Magloff

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Monitoring ecosystem restoration in high resolution 
CategoriesSustainable News

Monitoring ecosystem restoration in high resolution 

Spotted: The World Economic Forum’s (WEF’s) new initiative, Giving to Amplify Earth Action (GAEA), seeks to raise $3 trillion (around €2.7 trillion) every year to scale and replicate successful conservation and restoration projects around the world. Helping to connect people and organisations running the projects with funders and other supporters is the Restor network. 

Restor provides analytic support and a global network of individuals, agencies, and companies whose goal is to support restoration at scale through collaboration and sharing of best practices. Scientists provide insight and help project managers apply the latest research to each conservation or restoration site.  

Conservationists seeking information on a particular plot of land can use Restor’s expertise and access to satellite imagery to assess land cover, annual rainfall, levels of carbon in the soil, and biodiversity. Satellite imagery is available from up to 10 years in the past, and project teams can add data and photos to track the progression of a site’s restoration.  

The platform includes a searchable map of projects, divided into categories of tree nurseries, botanical gardens, seed banks, offices, suppliers, educational centres, and wells or pumps. There are more than 130,000 projects across 140 countries, and interested parties can set up a personal or organisation-level account to connect with the many others around the world – including funders and subject area experts – working towards healthier, sustainable environments. 

Fintech is providing a range of innovative solutions to the climate crisis, with innovations spotted in Springwise’s archive including a startup helping organisations assess the financial value of biodiversity and a platform supporting farmers through the transition to regenerative agriculture.

Written By: Keely Khoury

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A TikTok-style platform for gamified workplace learning
CategoriesSustainable News

A TikTok-style platform for gamified workplace learning

Spotted: Employee training is essential, not only for ensuring that companies have the right skills to thrive, but also for keeping employees satisfied and engaged. In fact, according to Deloitte, organisations with a strong learning culture have 30-50 per cent higher engagement and retention rates. 

But corporate training courses are too often delivered in a dry manner, which limits their effectiveness. Now, startup 5Mins claims to have found a way to boost course completion rates from 5-20 per cent, which it claims are typical today, to 85 per cent. Its secret: video micro-lessons delivered in bite-sized increments.  

The platform, which bills itself as ‘the TikTok of workplace learning,’ uses artificial intelligence (AI) to create personalised daily learning recommendations for each employee. These match employees to the skills their roles demand based on their specific needs and interactions. The platform then delivers lessons from its library of more than 15,000 options. These are delivered through a scrollable social-media-style feed.

Video source 5Mins

In addition to its focus on personalisation and wide selection of content, the platform offers a variety of gamification options aimed at making learning fun and keeping employees engaged. There are also options to purchase long-form courses from favourite instructors. And subtitles in more than 20 languages ensure that training is accessible across an organisation’s different operations.  

Techniques rooted in scientific research, such as spaced repetition, chunking, and active recall, are key to the stickiness of the company’s content and integrations with calendar notifications and email nudges help employees develop a learning habit.

Springwise has spotted other innovative training platforms in the archive, including one for budding venture capitalists and another that uses holograms to train doctors.

Written By: Lisa Magloff

Reference

Vestre launches “world’s first” furniture made from fossil-free steel
CategoriesSustainable News

Vestre launches “world’s first” furniture made from fossil-free steel

Street furniture brand Vestre and designer Emma Olbers have produced a piece of furniture using fossil-free steel that was made without creating carbon emissions.

The Tellus bench is made from steel forged by Swedish steelmaker SSAB in its converted blast furnace, which uses green hydrogen instead of coal for heat, and so emits no carbon dioxide.

Vestre, which aims to be recognized as the world’s most sustainable furniture company, says it is the first furniture manufacturer in the world to use the fossil-free steel. Steel is one of the brand’s prime targets for slashing its carbon emissions.

Photo of a lightweight steel bench on the street of a European city against an old building
The Tellus bench is the world’s first item of furniture made from fossil-free steel

“Early estimates show that converting all our steel to fossil-free could reduce our overall footprint by around 60 percent,” said Vestre chief sustainability officer Øyvind Bjørnstad.

For designer Olbers, the goal was to lower emissions even further by using as little material as possible to make the bench. Even though SSAB’s alloy is forged without coal, there are still carbon emissions elsewhere in the value chain, such as from mining and transport, so every gram of material still has some carbon cost.

“An outdoor bench for public environments must also withstand a lot of wear and tear,” Olbers said. “We have striven to use as little material as possible but still maintain the strong construction.”

Photo of the Tellus bench by Vestre on a sandy shoreline overlooking the water
Emma Olbers designed the bench so it would use as little material as possible

Aesthetically, Olbers wanted the bench to have a “metal feel” but also look inviting, so she gave it wide armrests that would invite repose while providing enough space to rest a coffee cup.

Tellus is intended for parks and other public spaces, and can be ordered in any classic RAL colour. The bench is titled after one of the alternative names for planet Earth.

Vestre came to work with the fossil-free steel following a long-time partnership with SSAB. Bjørnstad describes the companies as having a “tight dialogue” on several sustainability projects.

Photo of the Tellus steel bench in a lush, green public park
The bench is designed for public spaces such as parks

The Norwegian brand brought in Olbers because of the designer’s dedication to sustainable practices, which Bjørnstad said involves being highly scientific and rigorous in her approach.

The Swedish designer’s previous work includes the Now or Never – 1kg CO2e exhibition at this year’s Stockholm Furniture Fair, in which she visualised the carbon emissions of common materials.

The iron and steel industries currently account for around five per cent of total global green house gas emissions. SSAB first announced its plans to make steel free of fossil fuels in 2016 and made its first batch of the alloy last year.

The material has exactly the same properties as traditional steel but is produced using a process called Hydrogen Breakthrough Ironmaking Technology (HYBRIT), in which green hydrogen is burned instead of coal and coke.

Photo of the Tellus bench armrest and seat in detail
The pattern in the steel sheet helps to minimise the amount of material used

Green hydrogen is obtained via the electrolysis of water, which splits the water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen and emits no greenhouse gases.

SSAB is planning to convert all of its factories in Sweden, Finland and the USA to HYBRIT and phase out its other steel products by 2045.

Doing so could reduce the total CO2 emissions of Sweden by around ten per cent and Finland by approximately seven per cent, SSAB has estimated.

Close-up photo of the Tellus bench backrest showing screw detail
Fossil-free steel has the same properties as traditional steel

Vestre’s previous sustainability efforts include introducing CO2 emissions product labelling and reusing its old fair stands for new installations.

Its production facility in Norway, completed by BIG in 2022, is described by the brand as the most environmentally friendly furniture factory in the world, with Passivhaus strategies, solar panels and geothermal wells.

Photography is by Einar Aslaksen.

Reference

A solution for calculating and offsetting emissions from ad campaigns
CategoriesSustainable News

A solution for calculating and offsetting emissions from ad campaigns

Spotted: Few people stop to think about the carbon emitted by browsing the internet, but running and cooling servers and powering data transfer uses a lot of carbon. Each video or display ad impression represents an average of one gramme of CO2 emissions, which may not sound like a lot, until you consider how many ad impressions are viewed worldwide.

Now, Sharethrough, an omnichannel supply-side advertising exchange, and Scope3, a supplier of supply chain emissions data, have partnered to create GreenPMPs, the first supply-side platform (SSP) to offer media with net-zero carbon emissions.

The GreenPMP initiative enables brands to allocate a portion of their ad spend towards the funding of high-quality carbon removal activities, in order to compensate for the carbon emissions generated by running digital ad campaigns. Ultimately, this should make it easier for brands to reach their goals of net-zero emissions.

Video source GreenPMPs

The programme places a Green icon on ads to alert consumers that it is sustainable. Using Sharethough’s GreenPMPs site, advertisers can measure their emissions across the entire programmatic supply chain in real time, using data from Scope3. Using a Carbon Emissions Estimator, advertisers can get an approximation of how much carbon waste an ad campaign could potentially generate, and then remove their ads from high-emission or low-performing sites to reduce their overall campaign emissions.

Surveys show that consumers tend to favour brands that demonstrate their sustainability and eco-credentials. In the archive, Springwise has spotted other brands making a sustainable change, including a pasta brand that saves energy by promoting passive cooking and a fashion brand that promotes clothing resale.

Written By: Lisa Magloff

Reference

Heat Pumps Pave the Way to Zero Carbon
CategoriesSustainable News Zero Energy Homes

Heat Pumps Pave the Way to Zero Carbon

According to the The International Energy Association, “Heat pumps, powered by low-emissions electricity, are the central technology in the global transition to secure and sustainable heating.” Why? As rooftop solar panels, community solar, and utility-scale renewable energy expand, the incredible efficiency of heat pumps will free us from fossil fuels and help propel the way to zero carbon.

Heat pumps have been around for decades in the form of air conditioners and refrigerators, so the technology is mature and already cost competitive. The Inflation Reduction Act will bring tax credits, 30% off the cost of installation, bringing the technology within reach of even more families and property owners.

And best of all, heat pumps provide better comfort, using a more constant flow of heat compared to the on/off blast of a 3000° natural gas furnace. Heat pumps run smoothly, without temperature swings, and they filter and move more air through the house.

Whole house heat pumps

Similar to a furnace or central AC system, whole house heat pumps pump heat throughout your home via ductwork. For homes with existing ducts, this can be an easy change out of a fossil fuel –burning furnace for a heat pump.

The ducted, whole house heat pumps come in constant speed and variable speed. Constant speed heat pumps (also called single– or dual-stage heat pumps) run at only one or two speeds. They either run at full blast or they’re off, nothing. These often feature a lower upfront cost, but higher operational costs. And they usually require some type of backup (electric-resistance or gas) heating system, because they will struggle to work efficiently below 20° or 30°F. You’ll recognize a constant speed heat pump by the fan on the top of the outdoor unit, looking like a classic air conditioner box.

Variable speed heat pumps run at different speeds, modulating up and down to maintain the target temperature. They run a lot, but at lower energy levels and are overall more efficient. They will cost more upfront, but many work well in much colder temperatures. Thus, all cold climate heat pumps run at variable speeds.

Compared to the on/off blast of constant speed heat pumps, variable speed models run more quietly at lower speeds. You’ll see a more vertical looking outdoor unit with a fan on the side rather than the top. Variable speed units can be used with both ductless and ducted heat pump systems.

In 2021, we replaced an ancient gas furnace on one side of a Cleveland, OH, duplex. This whole-house, variable-speed heat pump provides heating and cooling under highly variable weather conditions. Because it’s used for short-term rentals, we keep it at a comfortable 72° all year. This all-electric arrangement on this side of the duplex costs far less to operate than the gas side.

Ductless heat pumps

As their name implies, ductless heat pumps don’t use ducts to distribute heat. Instead, they rely on indoor units (aka “heads”) installed in the wall, linking directly to an individual outdoor condenser; similar to a window or wall air-conditioning unit. This means that no conditioned air is escaping through leaky ducts, nor are ducts exposed to sunlight or unconditioned space. So ductless installations are most efficient.

Ductless heat pumps are logical for any space without ductwork. And they offer efficiency, economic, and environmental advantages over a central ducted heating system. All DHPs use variable speed technology. One downside is that you need to install a head on an exterior wall wherever you want heat; or provide backup electric-resistance heaters for rooms that don’t (or can’t) have a head

In our home in Portland, OR, heat pumps have kept our family warm for over a decade, since we removed our gas furnace. We also gained some square footage in our garage, which we have converted to an accessory dwelling unit.

The home came with baseboard electric heat in bedrooms and bathrooms, in addition to the central furnace. We now have two heat pump “heads” in the living room and master bedroom, and we use the backup electric-resistance heat very occasionally in the other rooms. This hybrid approach reduced our capital costs and costs us incredibly little to run. Our energy bills are only 20% of the national average!

How will they propel us to zero?

A heat pump uses refrigerant to capture heat and then moves that heat into (heating) or out of (cooling) your house. In the winter they pump heat from outside (even from cold air) to the inside, and in summer, they reverse. Here in Portland, and other places across the globe, climate change is bringing a greater need for cooling. A heat pump is, essentially, a super-efficient, reversible air-conditioner that you can use year-round.

Heating currently accounts for nearly half of all the energy used in homes. For heating, heat pumps are three to five times more efficient than fossil fuels, and save 50% on electric bills compared to electric resistance systems. They will heat everything, from air to water to laundry, and where they’re powered solely by renewable energy, they produce zero operating carbon.

Heat pumps are therefore key to decarbonization. As they are becoming more widely available, more contractors are becoming familiar with how to size, install, and maintain them. Of the 41% of US homes that use electricity for heating, only a quarter of those (13 million) use efficient heat pumps. But in 2021, heat pump sales surpassed gas furnaces, in the US, for the first time.

Whether it’s ducted or ductless, in Oregon or Ohio, modern ranches or old craftsman duplexes, our family has used the mighty heat pump to stay warm, save money, and do our part to solve the climate crisis. So while heat pumps might not get as much love, they rank up there with solar panels and electric vehicles as crucial technologies that will decarbonize our lives without sacrificing modern comforts. Let’s get heat pumped up and put one of these amazing machines in every home ASAP.Decarbonize your life logo

This article springs from an post by Naomi Cole and Joe Wachunas, first published in CleanTechnica. Their “Decarbonize Your Life,” series shares their experience, lessons learned, and recommendations for how to reduce household emissions.

The authors:

Joe Wachunas and Naomi Cole both work professionally to address climate change—Naomi in urban sustainability and energy efficiency and Joe in the electrification of buildings and transportation. A passion for debarbonization, and their commitment to walk the walk, has led them to ductless heat pumps, heat pump water heaters, induction cooking, solar in multiple forms, hang-drying laundry (including cloth diapers), no cars to electric cars and charging without a garage or driveway, a reforestation grant from the US Department of Agriculture, and more. They live in Portland, OR, with two young children.

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Warehouse robots that work with people
CategoriesSustainable News

Warehouse robots that work with people

Spotted: By 2026, it is expected that the UK logistics sector will face a shortage of 400,000 workers. One solution to this problem is automation, and our 2022 European Logistics Occupier Survey found that 80 per cent of occupiers believe that warehouse robotics are the top technology disruptor to logistics supply chains. But does this mean that robots will replace human workers? Or will organisations opt for a hybrid approach to automation? 

One startup that is firmly promoting the hybrid route is Robust.AI, a US-based company that develops robots that help human workers be more productive.  

According to the company, many robotic solutions make people feel unsafe and unseen, which leads to inefficient operations. As a result, it has developed a Collaborative Mobile Robot (CMR) called ‘Carter’. This CMR, the startup’s first hardware product, is designed to not only work near workers, but with them. The robots, which are essentially autonomous warehouse carts, move with and respond to human workers – like a ‘dance partner’ – and can be easily taken over manually by a worker grabbing the handlebar. The idea is that the robots will take care of laborious and repetitive tasks, such as transporting objects, leaving human workers to focus on high-value activities such as picking and packing.

Supporting Robust.AI’s hardware is its software suite ‘Grace’. This, the company claims, allows facilities managers to introduce automation quickly without changing their existing environment. To set up Grace, employees walk through the warehouse using the camera on a phone or tablet to map the environment. This creates a digital model of the facility, which can be used to set up workflows, all through a standard web browser. For example, a facilities manager can set up a virtual conveyor belt between two points in a warehouse using the robots. 

The Grace software is also installed on the Carter robots, allowing them to perceive and track people, locations, and objects. The robots then feed their perceptions back to fleet intelligence to optimise the system.

Springwise has spotted many other ways robots are being used, including to clean ships and make deliveries.

Written By: Matthew Hempstead

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