GM's BrightDrop electric cart will appear in Kroger stores for grocery pickup

Kalea Hall
The Detroit News

BrightDrop, the General Motors Co. business focused on delivery and logistics, is introducing the eCart, a new product that will help streamline online grocery order fulfillment, the company says. 

BrightDrop is partnering with Kroger, the largest U.S. grocer, to introduce the Trace Grocery eCart this year, the companies said Tuesday.

Kroger, America’s largest grocer, is slated to be the first customer to introduce the BrightDrop Trace Grocery into its e-commerce operations, beginning this year.

Trace Grocery, a temperature-controlled cart, allows employees to put orders on it before placing it at the curb for customers to pick up.

The new product puts BrightDrop in the online grocery market, which is expected to reach $240 billion by 2025.

The eCart is built on BrightDrop's Trace Platform and features:

  • temperature control to store items for up to four hours
  • propulsion-assistance to move up to 350 pounds of groceries
  • auto-braking to stop the electric motor to match an operator’s walking speed up to 3 mph
  • nine compartments to sort items
  • flexibility to maneuver inside and outside of a store
  • weatherproofing to handle various temperatures 

BrightDrop and Kroger did an initial pilot program in Lexington and Versailles, Kentucky, and found "a noticeable improvement in the customer and associate experience," the companies said.

General Motors Co.'s BrightDrop business is introducing an eCart called Trace Grocery to help grocery retailers get their products into customers’ hands faster, safer and more efficiently.

In addition to the eCart, BrightDrop has started delivering electric vans. The company says it has more than 25,000 reservations and letters of intent for its electric delivery vans and has delivered more than 100 of them.

Trace Grocery is available in limited quantities. Full-scale availability is expected in 2024.

khall@detroitnews.com

Twitter: @bykaleahall