Close X
Monday, November 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Loblaw says it's exploring grocery home delivery partnership with Instacart

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Sep, 2017 10:23 AM

    Loblaw Companies Ltd. (TSX:L) says it's exploring the possibility of offering grocery home delivery one day.

    Spokesman Kevin Groh says in a statement that the company has "engaged" a number of e-commerce innovators around the world, including Instacart, as it continues to explore the best ways to serve its customers in the future. He says that may include home delivery.

    Loblaw already offers a click and collect program, where customers order their groceries online and pick up the items at a store's parking lot within a pre-selected time frame. Groh says the program will soon be at 200 of the company's stores.

    California-based Instacart enables customers to shop from local stores' inventory and place an order via an app, which is then picked up by a so-called expert shopper and delivered to the customer's location.

    The news comes after tech giant Amazon recently acquired Whole Foods Market, which has 13 Canadian locations. The acquisition could accelerate the development of online grocery delivery in Canada.

    Currently, Canadians have few options for grocery delivery with a small number of companies, like Grocery Gateway, and a few large chains offering the service in limited locations.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. woman files lawsuit against Canadian government over terrorist label

    A B.C. Supreme Court lawsuit accuses the federal government of maliciously supplying false information about terrorist-related activity to the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation in order to secure lucrative military contracts for Canada's defence industry.

    B.C. woman files lawsuit against Canadian government over terrorist label

    'Dirty Chinese Restaurant' game denounced as racist by U.S., Ont. politicians

    'Dirty Chinese Restaurant' game denounced as racist by U.S., Ont. politicians
    A Toronto-area company's upcoming video game called "Dirty Chinese Restaurant" is being denounced as racist, but the business says its product is meant as satire.

    'Dirty Chinese Restaurant' game denounced as racist by U.S., Ont. politicians

    B.C. municipalities want campaign finance reform ahead of 2018 local elections

    B.C. municipalities want campaign finance reform ahead of 2018 local elections
    Municipalities in British Columbia want the provincial government to restrict the role of money in local politics in time for next year's elections.

    B.C. municipalities want campaign finance reform ahead of 2018 local elections

    Stop the presses? Newspapers snubbed in Liberal government's cultural policy

    Stop the presses? Newspapers snubbed in Liberal government's cultural policy
    The chair of News Media Canada says the country's struggling newspaper industry is "on its own" thanks to a federal cultural strategy that all but snubs so-called legacy media.

    Stop the presses? Newspapers snubbed in Liberal government's cultural policy

    Expert on money laundering appointed to review practices in B.C. casinos

    Expert on money laundering appointed to review practices in B.C. casinos
    An independent expert has been appointed by the B.C. government to conduct a review of the province's policies and practices to prevent money laundering in the gambling industry.

    Expert on money laundering appointed to review practices in B.C. casinos

    Police probe double homicide after couple found dead in south Vancouver home

    Police probe double homicide after couple found dead in south Vancouver home
    Vancouver police say they are investigating a double homicide after the bodies of a man and a woman in their 60s were found in a home on Wednesday.

    Police probe double homicide after couple found dead in south Vancouver home

    PrevNext