Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ram vans to get self-driving makeover

Fiat Chrysler and Google-inspired Waymo solidify their strategic partnershi­p

- ERIC D. LAWRENCE

DETROIT — Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s and Waymo are moving well beyond developing self-driving minivans together.

In a dramatic expansion of their four-year-old partnershi­p, FCA and Waymo, once known as Google’s Self-Driving Car Project, plan to fit Ram ProMaster Vans with Waymo Driver, the autonomous brains behind the hundreds of Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid minivans in Waymo’s ride-hailing fleet. Developing self-driving technology for light commercial vehicles, such as the ProMaster Van, highlights the growing importance companies see in delivery services, particular­ly since the onset of the covid-19 pandemic.

But perhaps more significan­t for the long term in the announceme­nt last week is news that Waymo is now slated to become the “exclusive, strategic partner” for higher-level self-driving technology across FCA’s fleet.

No financial terms of the deal were released, and no timeline has been provided.

The moves come as FCA has stopped working with Amazonback­ed Aurora Innovation. The two signed a memorandum of understand­ing in June 2019 “to investigat­e the developmen­t and deployment of self-driving commercial vehicles,” but the decision was “made to discontinu­e discussion­s,” according to a statement provided by FCA spokesman Nick Cappa.

Highlighti­ng the strides from the original FCA/Waymo deal, FCA CEO Mike Manley noted that the Waymo-equipped Pacificas operating in the Phoenix area represent a partnershi­p deploying autonomous technology “in the real world, on public roads.”

“Our partnershi­p is setting the pace for the safe and sustainabl­e mobility solutions that will help define the automotive world in the years and decades to come,” Manley said in a news release, referencin­g level 4, which would be one level below self-driving technology able to manage all roads and conditions.

Self-driving technology developmen­t has continued to move forward in recent years, although many of the rosy early projection­s about the deployment pace for robocars have not materializ­ed. A fatal crash in 2018 involving a self-driving Volvo operated by Uber boosted public scrutiny considerab­ly.

Much of the developmen­t that has come to pass involves driver-assistance technology now available in many models. Waymo, however, has continued its self-driving push and is clearly one of the leaders.

Waymo CEO John Krafcik noted some milestones for the partnershi­p with FCA, saying the Pacificas in Waymo’s fleet have “safely and reliably driven more fully autonomous miles than any other vehicle.”

According to Waymo, its vehicles have driven more than 20 million miles autonomous­ly on public roads in 25 U.S. cities, with 15 billion miles of simulation testing.

“Together, we’ll introduce the Waymo Driver throughout the FCA brand portfolio, opening up new frontiers for ride-hailing, commercial delivery and personal-use vehicles around the world,” Krafcik said in the release.

FCA’s brands include Jeep, Ram, Chrysler, Dodge, Fiat, Alfa Romeo, Lancia and Maserati.

The Ram ProMaster is built at FCA’s Saltillo Van Assembly Plant in the Mexican state of Coahuila. It’s based on the Fiat Ducato, which the company builds through a partnershi­p with Peugeot maker PSA Group. FCA and PSA Group are working toward a merger, which would create the world’s fourth-largest automaker. They recently announced that the new company would be called Stellantis.

The proposed merger’s possible impact on reducing competitio­n in the commercial van sector is an area of concern for European regulators, who last month announced a more indepth investigat­ion of the companies’ plans.

European Commission Executive Vice President Margrethe Vestager said in posted remarks that commercial vans are an “increasing­ly important market in a digital economy where private consumers rely more than ever on delivery services.”

The commission noted in a news release that either FCA or PSA Group is the market leader in light commercial vehicles in many countries, and a merger “would remove one of the main competitor­s.”

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