Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Ford to invest $1 bn in autonomous vehicle tech firm Argo AI

-

REUTERS: Ford Motor Co plans to invest $1 billion over the next five years in tech startup Argo AI to help the Detroit automaker reach its goal of producing a selfdrivin­g vehicle for commercial ride sharing fleets by 2021, the companies announced recently.

The investment in Pittsburgb­ased Argo AI, founded by former executives on self-driving teams at Google and Uber, will make Ford the company’s largest shareholde­r.

Ford Chief Executive Officer Mark Fields said the investment is in line with previous announceme­nts on planned capital expenditur­es.

Argo AI, which focuses on artificial intelligen­ce and robotics, will help build what Ford calls its “virtual driver system” at the heart of the fully autonomous car Ford said last year it would develop by 2021.

“With Argo AI’S agility and Ford’s scale we’re combining the benefits of a technology start up with the experience and discipline we have at Ford,” Fields said at a press conference.

Once the technology is fully developed for Ford, it could be licensed to other companies, executives said.

While Ford will retain a majority of the start-up’s equity, the potential for an equity stake as Argo AI hires 200 more employees will be an advantage in recruiting talent, executives said.

“They have the opportunit­y to run it pretty independen­tly with a board, but because it is a separate company or subsidiary, it has the opportunit­y to go out and recruit with competitiv­e compensati­on packages and equity,” Fields said.

Until now, Ford’s investment­s in future transporta­tion technology have been relatively modest, compared with those of General Motors Co and others. One of Ford’s largest such investment­s in the past year was US$75 million to buy a minority stake in Velodyne, a manufactur­er of laser-based lidar sensing systems for self-driving cars.

Rival GM made a billion-dollar bet a year ago with its acquisitio­n of Silicon Valley self-driving startup Cruise Automation. GM also invested US$ 500 million to buy a 9-percent stake in San Francisco-based ride services firm Lyft, a competitor to Uber.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka