America’s Volkswagen and Uber on Thursday revealed an ambitious plan to launch a robot commercial service – using an autonomous electric VW ID. Buzz Vehicles – in many US cities over the next decade.
Companies expect to start a Los Angeles trade service, the first city on the list, by the end of 2026. VW and Uber did not provide details on possible future markets.
Initially, the service will not be without a guide. The fleet of autonomous vehicles will have human security operators behind the wheel before driving without driver in 2027, a VW spokesman told TechCrunch.
This gives Volkswagen Admt, the Volkswagen subsidiary of America, up to two years to browse the California regulatory landscape and obtain the licenses needed to test its autonomous vehicles and eventually operate a commercial service.
Volkswagen Admt will start a Los Angeles test later this year as soon as it receives the initial test license from the California motor vehicle section. The Agency regulates autonomous testing and development of vehicles in the state and the California Public Business Committee handles to allow the commercial component of Robotaxi services.
Despite the major obstacles ahead, collaboration is a remarkable step for Volkswagen Admt. The subsidiary that began publicly in July 2023 with Austin Vehicle Test Program and a fleet of 10 electric IDs. Buzz vehicles equipped with Partner Mobilee technology.
The Volkswagen Group’s parent, along with Ford, had carried the ambitions of the autonomous vehicle to start Argo, until the two automakers pulled financial support and dug its ruins. Then Volkswagen turned to Mobileye to come from autonomous vehicle technology and this relationship has recently been deepening. ADMT, the effort based on the American Volkswagen, began about nine months after Argo.
Volkswagen in 2023 said she is not interested in building a special ride service. Still, he seems to see a business in selling self-guiding. Buzz Vans and fleet management software in other companies.
Details about its collaboration with Uber suggest that the plan is intact.
“Volkswagen is not just a car manufacturer – we are shaping the future of mobility and our collaboration with Uber accelerates this vision,” said Christian Senger, CEO of Volkswagen Autonomous Mobility. “What really separates us is our ability to combine the best of both worlds-high volume of construction expertise with cutting-edge technology and deep understanding of urban mobility needs.”
This is Uber’s last AV partnership. The giant in recent years locks the deals with more than 14 autonomous vehicles all the way, tradition and truck. Uber recently launched a robot service with Waymo in Austin and is going to do the same in Atlanta.
