Consumer/Food/News/ Zapp in talks to leave Amsterdam, the city fast becoming the grave of speedy grocery Amsterdam has proven a particularly tricky place for speedy grocery companies like Zapp to operate By Freya Pratty 22 June 2022 Zapp Zapp \Consumer Czech online grocer Rohlik raises €220m in Series D By Zosia Wanat 17 June 2022 Consumer/Food/News/ Zapp in talks to leave Amsterdam, the city fast becoming the grave of speedy grocery Amsterdam has proven a particularly tricky place for speedy grocery companies like Zapp to operate By Freya Pratty 22 June 2022 British grocery startup Zapp, which has raised $300m in funding from investors including Atomico and Lightspeed, is in talks to pull out of the Netherlands, Sifted has learnt. The company confirmed to Sifted that it’s consulting with interested parties, including unions and employees, on proposals to exit the Netherlands, with a final decision expected next month. Zapp has operations in both Rotterdam and Amsterdam. The team were told the news at an all hands meeting this morning. Amsterdam has proven a particularly tricky place for speedy grocery companies to operate. Zapp says the city had forced the closure of two of its key dark stores (the buildings speedy grocery companies operate out of). In January, the city put a one year freeze on opening new dark stores, citing noise and scooter traffic as a concern. The city has launched a proposal to only allow dark stores in industrial areas, which would effectively mean banning them from the city centre, and throwing the speedy grocery model, which relies on having stores close to customers, into question. “We remain incredibly frustrated by the lack of genuine engagement by the Amsterdam municipality over many months and the forced closure of two of our flagship Zappstores,” says Steve O’Hear, VP of strategy at Zapp. “We have always sought to have a constructive dialogue with the City of Amsterdam and collaborate with all stakeholders to learn and improve on the way rapid delivery can meet the needs of neighbours and customers alike,” says O’Hear. “Our proposed exit now puts hundreds of jobs at risk and we are truly sorry for the impact it will have on our employees and loyal customers.” Companies, including Gorillas and Zapp, have launched legal cases against the city’s decision. But that was a whole lot easier to do when the grocery companies were in a stronger financial position; the likely recession and tighter funding market will mean they have less in the coffers for things like legal battles. Freya Pratty is a reporter at Sifted. She tweets from @FPratty and writes our sustainability-focused newsletter — you can sign up here. Related Articles Member Getting spicier: the next generation of grocery apps get specialist By Freya Pratty Click here to read more In data: Europe’s foodtech ecosystem in 2020 By Cecile Bussy Click here to read more 11 winetech startups to know in France By Marie Mawad in Paris Click here to read more Waitrose: £10m in annual cost savings through innovation By Maija Palmer Click here to read more Most Read 1 \Startup Life Where are Europe’s top digital nomad villages? 2 \Public & Academic UCL and Oxford are Europe’s ‘worst universities for spinouts’ 3 \Venture Capital The top early-stage investors in the Netherlands 4 \Fintech Payment flows API startup Formance raises $3.1m pre-seed 5 \Venture Capital Top early-stage investors in the Nordics Join the conversation Subscribe Notify of new follow-up comments new replies to my comments
Member Getting spicier: the next generation of grocery apps get specialist By Freya Pratty Click here to read more