Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Self-driving shuttles try virus-killing UV rays

- By David Welch and Ed Ludlow Bloomberg News

A pair of self-driving car startups are offering a solution to commuters shunning shared transporta­tion in the midst of a pandemic: ultraviole­t rays.

Voyage and May Mobility, two autonomous-vehicle companies that charge riders to go on simple, specialize­d routes, are putting UV-light emitters in their shuttles to help keep their services running.

The rays are already used in ambulances and can destroy viruses, fungus and bacteria between rides.

The effort echoes Avis Budget Group Inc.’s move to market its partnershi­p with Lysol maker Reckitt Benckiser Group Plc to boost disinfecti­on protocols for its rental cars. Uber Technologi­es Inc. and Lyft Inc. also have taken steps to keep riders safe, though both are transporti­ng far fewer people than before COVID-19.

Voyage’s service offers low-speed trips on predictabl­e routes to riders in two massive retirement communitie­s in California and Florida.

The company is putting the UV system in its thirdgener­ation vehicle — a retrofitte­d Chrysler Pacifica minivan — that costs half as much as previous models, Chief Executive Officer Oliver Cameron said in an interview. That helps make the roughly $2,000 added cost of the UV system more palatable. The new vehicle also can run without a safety driver.

May Mobility resumed its service in downtown Grand Rapids, Michigan, on Aug. 31 after suspending service in March.

“Their solutions may seem niche, but building a somewhat profitable selfdrivin­g business, even if small, can be an effective strategy to raise funds and transfer their operationa­l know-how to improve their technology at a faster pace,” BloombergN­EF analyst Alejandro ZamoranoCa­david said.

 ?? DAVID L. RYAN/THE BOSTON GLOBE ?? May Mobility vehicles in Providence, Rhode Island.
DAVID L. RYAN/THE BOSTON GLOBE May Mobility vehicles in Providence, Rhode Island.

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