A great article by DEREK THOMPSON
It is right on target about the reasons– they are supply chain reasons. Amazon covets the urban locations to speed up deliveries; but it would be fantastically complex to procure and engineer these one at a time. With the Whole Foods locations, they now have drop-off points for overnight delivery, and mini-warehouses for food items, especially those that need ‘fresh’ or ‘frozen’ treatment. $14 billion is cheap in terms of accessibility to a population, say within a circle of a given radius.
Perhaps we should rate warehouses and depots by a distribution of the number of customers in a unit of area.
The retailer’s $14 billion bet isn’t just about the future of food. It’s about becoming the one-stop shop for your entire life.

This review focuses on key developments in maritime safety and analyzes shipping losses (of over 100 gross tons) during the 12 months prior to December 31, 2016. It also identifies some of key risk management challenges the industry faces moving forward.