RELATED: Walmart Just Issued This Urgent Warning to Shoppers. On Nov. 8, Walmart announced that it would be rolling out driverless trucks to fulfill orders placed through its online grocery business, CNBC reports. The program, which uses technology developed by tech startup Gatik, is currently operating two driverless trucks 12 hours a day in Bentonville, Arkansas, where Walmart maintains its headquarters. Each day, the trucks complete a seven-mile route between a fulfillment center, where they are packed with groceries, and a Walmart Neighborhood Market location in Bentonville, where the goods are offloaded. “Through our work with Gatik, we’ve identified that autonomous box trucks offer an efficient, safe and sustainable solution for transporting goods on repeatable routes between our stores,” said Walmart senior vice president Tom Ward in a statement. In Sept., the company had also announced a partnership with Ford Motor Co. and Argo AI to roll out driverless delivery in Miami, Florida; Austin, Texas; and Washington D.C., and had previously announced the development of driverless routes in Scottsdale, Arizona through a partnership with self-driving car company Cruise, Supermarket News reports. For the latest retail news delivered straight to your inbox, sign up for our daily newsletter! The driverless technology now being used by Walmart could potentially save the big box store—and companies like it—millions of dollars annually, insiders say. “Taking the driver out is the holy grail of this technology,” Gautam Narang, CEO of Gatik, told CNBC. According to Gatik, moving to a driverless model could reduce logistics costs for grocery chains by up to 30 percent. With high demand for workers across multiple industries, Walmart has been rolling out incentives to help attract employees. In Sept., CNN Business reported that the big box store was hiring 20,000 full-time and part-time workers for jobs in its fulfillment and distribution centers. In Nov., The New York Times reported that the company was offering workers starting salaries as high as $17, as well as the promise of free college tuition to attract talent. However, one aspect of the company’s supply chain woes may be mitigated by the driverless truck program, insiders say. “This solution is very relevant across different supply chains, different kinds of logistics,” Narang told CNBC. “It’s not just about the labor shortage. It’s all about increasing efficiency, helping with the operating costs.” Walmart isn’t the only chain that’s hoping to lower costs and increase sales with a move to a driverless model, however.ae0fcc31ae342fd3a1346ebb1f342fcb In 2019, Kroger announced that had partnered with robotics company Nuro to launch a driverless delivery program in Houston and has since become one of the company’s primary investors, recently contributing to Nuro’s latest $600 million investment round. In March 2021, Albertsons Companies, which owns grocery chains Albertsons, Acme, Balducci’s, Carrs, Haggen, Jewel-Osco, Kings Food Markets, Pavilions, Randalls, Safeway, Shaw’s, Star Market, Tom Thumb, United Supermarkets, and Vons, announced the rollout of its own pilot driverless program in Northern California, with products delivered to customers via an emission-free delivery cart. RELATED: Walmart Shoppers Are Outraged the Store Is Getting Rid of This.