The company said the unmanned aerial vehicles or drones will not deliver packages directly to shoppers but will instead help transport bundles of items from its distribution stations to 150,000 representatives mobilised across rural China who will then get them to shoppers.
The distance between distribution stations to rural representatives, usually less than 10 km according to JD, are more fixed for engineers to design drone itineraries and landing points. Representatives will be notified in advance to wait for drones to land with packages, Xinhua news agency reported.
Both JD.Com and its arch rival Alibaba have been working to unleash consumption demand from China's 618 million rural residents, whose income growth has been outpacing their urban peers in recent years despite a slowing economy, the report said.
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