Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Amazon buys self-driving car firm

- By Jay Greene and Faiz Siddiqui

SEATTLE — Amazon will buy the self-driving technology firm Zoox, expanding its portfolio of technologi­es to automate the delivery of packages.

The e-commerce giant, which announced the deal in a blog post Friday morning, did not detail plans for how it would use Zoox’s technology. In a statement, the chief executive of Amazon’s consumer business, Jeff Wilke, only extolled Zoox’s efforts “to imagine, invent, and design a worldclass autonomous ride-hailing experience.”

But Zoox would fit into Amazon’s efforts to get goods to its customers more efficientl­y. Eight years ago, Amazon bought Kiva Systems, a maker of robotic systems that move goods throughout warehouses, for $775 million. For the past seven years, it has aggressive­ly built out an expansive delivery network of planes, trucks and vans.

(Amazon chief executive Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.)

For Zoox, the deal provides a deep-pocketed benefactor to advance its technology.

“We now have an even greater opportunit­y to realize a fully autonomous future,” Zoox chief executive Aicha Evans said in a statement. She will continue to run Zoox along with company’s co-founder and chief technology officer Jesse Levinson.

Amazon spokeswoma­n Angie Quennell declined to disclose the financial terms. A Zoox representa­tive referred a request for comment to Amazon.

The Informatio­n, a tech news website that first reported the deal, said the retailer would pay more than $1 billion for the company. A month ago, the Wall Street Journal reported that the companies were in “advanced talks” for a deal that valued Zoox at less than the $3.2 billion it achieved in a funding round in 2018.

Zoox, which is testing fleets of autonomous vehicles in San Francisco and Las Vegas, was founded in 2014 and aims to build a ground -up system transformi­ng how people get around cities. The company is focused on building an autonomous system that includes elements such as the artificial intelligen­ce powering the driving, a zero-emissions vehicle in which to place the software and an inhouse mobility service.

The company has drawn attention for its ambitious goal to master the complex streets of bustling cities in its initial stages rather than testing in less complicate­d environmen­ts and gradually expanding. Among the array of driverless car startups dotting Silicon Valley, Zoox has stood out for its conservati­ve approach to getting

to market and its emphasis on safety.

“We’re going to start seeing three to five years where people start actually deploying in cities,” Mark Rosekind, the company’s chief safety innovation officer, told The Washington Post recently, “but it’s going to be 20 or 30 years before you start seeing this all over the place.”

Such a fleet could augment Amazon’s efforts to take on more of the delivery of its packages itself, further reducing its dependence on shipping companies. Its relationsh­ips with those companies have become increasing­ly strained as Amazon built out its own logistics operations following the 2013 holiday season when a surge in sales flooded UPS and FedEx networks and caused some deliveries to be late.

A year ago, FedEx decided not to renew its domestic Express contract with Amazon, the speediest option FedEx offers for shipping via air. Since then, Amazon has leased a fleet of planes, purchased thousands of truck trailers and enlisted entreprene­urs to build out delivery networks across major metro areas.

And last September, Amazon ordered 100,000 fully electric delivery vehicles from Plymouth, Mich.-based Rivian, a company in which Amazon invested $440 million. Amazon expects to start delivering with those vans in 2021.

The acquisitio­n drew mocking from Elon Musk, the chief executive of Tesla, which has its own autonomous-driving technology. Mr. Musk tweeted that Mr. Bezos is a copycat.

Earlier this month, Mr. Musk criticized Amazon’s short-lived ban of a self-published e-book by a conservati­ve author who argues that the mainstream media is overstatin­g the threat from the coronaviru­s. At the time, Mr. Musk tweeted that the decision, which Amazon eventually reversed, was “insane” and that Amazon ought to be broken up.

 ?? Mark Lennihan/Associated Press ?? In this Oct. 10, 2018, file photo, Amazon Prime boxes are loaded on a cart for delivery in New York.
Mark Lennihan/Associated Press In this Oct. 10, 2018, file photo, Amazon Prime boxes are loaded on a cart for delivery in New York.

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