Amazon plans sharp cut in packages it sends through US Post Office, source says

Packages are transported on a conveyor belt at the Amazon warehouse in Melville, New York, U.S., July 11, 2023. REUTERS
WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – Amazon.com plans to sharply cut the number ‌of packages it sends through the U.S. Postal Service after failing to agree business terms, a person briefed on the matter told Reuters.
The e-commerce major, widely considered the Postal Service’s biggest customer, has been reducing postal shipments and aims to cut them by at least two-thirds ​by September when its contract ends, the person said.
The Wall Street Journal reported the plan earlier on Tuesday.
U.S. ​Postmaster General David Steiner told Reuters on the sidelines of a congressional hearing on Tuesday ⁠that USPS is still negotiating with Amazon.
“I couldn’t tell you where that’s going to end,” Steiner said, declining to ​comment on the size of any reduction, citing a confidentiality agreement.
Steiner said at a U.S. House hearing on Tuesday that USPS ​could be out of cash within 12 months, or as early as October if it makes required retirement payments.
Amazon and USPS have been in talks for more than a year about extending their relationship. However, Amazon package volume has begun to come down with full reduction ​likely by fall, the person said, declining to be identified as the information was private.
USPS in January began taking proposals for ​access to its last-mile delivery network, opening up more than 18,000 destination delivery units and local processing centers nationwide through an auction process ‌aimed at ⁠raising funds.
Amazon last year said, after a 30-year relationship, it was “surprised” USPS wanted to run an auction and that given the uncertainty it was evaluating options.
On Tuesday, Amazon said in a statement it had “wanted to increase our volumes with the USPS. We negotiated with them in good faith for over a year to try and reach a deal that would bring ​them billions in revenue and ​believed we were heading ⁠toward an agreement, when the USPS abruptly walked away at the 11th hour and introduced the auction concept.”
Amazon said it submitted a bid and, though it hopes “to continue our partnership, ​even at a reduced level, we now have to prepare to meet our customers’ delivery ​needs regardless ⁠of the outcome of the auction.”
In April, Amazon said it would spend more than $4 billion to expand its U.S. rural delivery network by year-end, doubling down on faster shipments to increase demand from shoppers in small towns and the countryside.
Steiner noted in ⁠December that ​Amazon used USPS 1.7 billion times a year to handle packages.
Steiner in ​December told Reuters that without USPS “Amazon wouldn’t be what it is today… We would love to continue that relationship. We just want to make sure we ​continue at a fair price.”

Reporting by Juby Babu in Mexico City; Editing by Shilpi Majumdar, Chris Reese and Christopher Cushing

 

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