The
company's latest foray into the delivery space is in partnership
with Cornerstore, a Chilean online grocery provider that Uber
holds a majority stake in since October.
Customers in Canada's Montreal and Toronto, eleven Brazilian
cities, including in Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo, four Chilean
cities, Colombia's Bogota and Peru's Lima will be able to order
groceries from local stores and chains through the Uber Eats
app.
In Canada, groceries can be ordered from large chains Walmart
Inc and Metro Inc.
A launch in U.S. cities is expected later in July, beginning
with regional merchants in Miami and Dallas, an Uber spokeswoman
said.
Uber's grocery delivery push comes at a time when its core
ride-hailing business is under pressure around the globe with
coronavirus lockdown orders keeping many passengers at home. At
the same time, Uber's restaurant delivery business Eats has seen
growing demand during the pandemic, with second-quarter food
delivery orders up more than 100%.
Uber on Monday said it would acquire U.S. food delivery rival
Postmates for $2.65 billion to significantly increase the
business of supplying everyday goods, including groceries.
(Reporting by Tina Bellon in New York; Editing by Stephen
Coates)
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