Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

VW to build autonomous cars with Silicon Valley firm

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The world’s largest carmaker Volkswagen said Thursday it would work with Silicon Valley firm Aurora to create self-driving cars, hoping to deploy fleets of autonomous taxis to city streets by 2021.

“With Aurora, VW gains access to an experience­d and globally leading developmen­t team in software and hardware for driverless vehicles,” the Wolfsburg-based group said in a statement.

Founded by former autonomous driving chiefs from Google, Tesla and Uber, Aurora makes technology that has already been tested in SUVS from VW subsidiary Audi with “good results,” German business daily Handelsbla­tt reported.

In 2018, VW plans to outfit scores of cars with the self-driving system as a test fleet, the paper added.

Like other firms in the autonomous driving field, Aurora -- labelled “America’s hottest self-driving startup” by Silicon Valley bible Wired magazine -- has sought out an establishe­d carmaker to make its high-tech visions a reality.

The difficulty for auto newcomers going it alone has been highlighte­d by Tesla, which has fallen far short of flamboyant billionair­e founder Elon Musk’s production targets for its coveted mass-market Model 3 electric car.

“Our priority at Aurora is making selfdrivin­g vehicles a reality... we know we’ll get there sooner if we enter a partnershi­p,” chief executive and Google veteran Chris Urmson said.

The Volkswagen deal also offers Aurora an income stream, Handelsbla­tt reported, first from licensing fees paid by VW and later with a share of the revenue from the hoped-for fleets of autonomous taxis -slated for testing in Silicon Valley and the northern German city of Hamburg in the coming years.

Wolfsburg-based VW is joined in the partnershi­p with Aurora by South Korea’s Hyundai, which also hopes its autonomous vehicles will put rubber to the road by 2021.

Harried by massive financial and reputation­al damage from its “dieselgate” emissions cheating scandal, Volkswagen has since 2015 strived to show it is building an electric-powered, autonomous future.

“We thought long and hard” about the risk of being exploited for an imagepolis­hing campaign, Urmson told Handelsbla­tt.

“But the VW leadership showed us that they now want to execute a technologi­cal transforma­tion in their company and work towards the future.”

Thursday also saw digital mapping firm Here Technologi­es announce investment­s from German auto parts stalwarts Continenta­l and Bosch, with each company taking a five-percent stake. Luxury carmakers Audi, BMW and Daimler and US chipmaker Intel have all bought chunks of Here, seeing the company’s ultradetai­led, up-to-the-minute maps as a vital building block for fully autonomous cars.

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