Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Waymo to buy 20,000 electric vehicles for ride-hailing, self-driving fleet

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NEW YORK — Self-driving car spinoff Waymo will buy up to 20,000 electric vehicles from Jaguar Land Rover to help realize its vision for a robotic ride-hailing service.

The commitment announced last week marks another step in Waymo’s evolution from a secret project started in Google nine years ago to a spinoff that’s gearing up for an audacious attempt to reshape the transporta­tion business.

The Jaguar deal will expand upon a fleet of selfdrivin­g cars that Waymo has been gradually building in partnershi­p with Fiat Chrysler since 2015. Waymo initially equipped about 600 Pacifica minivans with its self-driving technology before negotiatin­g to buy “thousands” more of the vehicles.

The minivans will be part of a ride-hailing service that Waymo plans to launch in Phoenix later this year. If all goes well, Waymo expects to expand the service to other states.

Jaguar will deliver its vehicles for Waymo’s ridehailin­g service from 2020 to 2022. The 20,000 “I-Pace” models will provide up to 1 million rides per day, according to Waymo.

Financial terms of Jaguar’s deal with Waymo weren’t disclosed. Jaguar lists the starting price for its I-Pace model at about $70,000, a figure that translates into $1.4 billion for 20,000 vehicles.

Waymo’s planned ridehailin­g service poses a potential threat to Uber and Lyft, the early leaders in that still-developing field. Both Uber and Lyft are trying to ward off Waymo by developing their own self-driving cars, even though they got a late start in autonomous technology.

Uber’s efforts suffered a major setback when one of its autonomous cars struck and killed a pedestrian in Tempe, Ariz., in March. Last week, Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey suspended Uber’s self-driving vehicle testing privileges, stating in a letter to CEO Dara Khosrowsha­hi that video footage of the crash raised concerns about the San Franciscob­ased company’s ability to safely test its technology in Arizona.

Without mentioning Uber, Waymo CEO John Krafcik emphasized the company’s track record for safety while its cars have traveled more than 5 million miles on public roads as its engineers have continued to fine-tune the robotic technology.

 ?? AP/MARK LENNIHAN ?? John Krafcik, the chief executive officer of Waymo, stands with the Jaguar I-Pace vehicle last week in New York.
AP/MARK LENNIHAN John Krafcik, the chief executive officer of Waymo, stands with the Jaguar I-Pace vehicle last week in New York.

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