The new rules came into force on 1 July, but already the two main companies in “ultra-quick commerce” – Getir, a Turkish firm, and Germany’s Flink – had announced they were leaving France.
In a statement, Getir, which also owns Gorillas and Frichti, said the decision was “inevitable because of the difficult economic climate, a hostile regulatory environment and an absence of potential buyers”.
A commercial court in Paris has now officially placed Getir and Gorillas in liquidation, with the loss of some 1,300 jobs. It gave Frichti three more months to find a possible buyer. The court will rule on Flink’s fate later in the summer.
At their peak, 12 different operators ran some 80 locations in Paris alone. Overall, the sector employed about 2,200 people, mostly on permanent contracts.
City officials in Paris were delighted by the pull-out. “The dark stores are over,” said deputy mayor Emmanuel Grégoire, evoking their “predatory capitalistic behaviour”.
Typically, dark stores presented a blank front to the street, with just the name of the company on a frosted window. Inside were shelves of commonly bought goods, stacked into bags and waiting to be handed to couriers.
But locals complained of constant noise from squads of deliverers, while city planners said the model threatened to drain life from the public space and create a society of home-bound consumers.
Food deliveries in France will remain possible via Internet operators such as Uber Eats and Deliveroo that work in co-operation with supermarkets.
Campaigners against “quick commerce” say that ironically, staff in dark stores – being on full-time contracts – were better protected than the freelance couriers employed by online platforms.
Source : BBC