The Mercury News

Uber sells self-driving division to startup, takes stake.

Deal will value Aurora at $10 billion and give Uber 26% ownership in company

- By Lizette Chapman and Dana Hull

Uber Technologi­es sold its self-driving car division to Aurora Innovation Inc. and took a stake in the startup, creating a larger competitor to the leader in the field, Alphabet’s Waymo.

The deal will value Aurora at $10 billion, according to people familiar with the discussion­s who asked not to be identified discussing private informatio­n. In exchange for investing $400 million in Aurora, Uber will get a 26% ownership stake in the company. That number increases to 40% when counting the stakes held by the employees and investors of Uber’s autonomous driving division. Uber Chief Executive Officer Dara Khosrowsha­hi and one other yet-to-be-named person representi­ng Uber will join Aurora’s board.

The deal, expected to close during the first quarter, also guarantees that when Aurora releases its self-driving vehicles, they’ll launch on Uber’s network.

By adding Uber’s self- driving car unit, Aurora will gain hundreds of engineers and access to one of the world’s largest ride-hailing networks. For Uber, which has slashed high-profile cash-burning initiative­s this year in a push to turn a profit in 2021, the deal will give it a significan­t stake in one of Silicon Valley’s most promising autonomous driving startups.

Uber’s driverless car unit, Advanced Technologi­es Group, is a subsidiary, created just before Uber went public last year with its own $7.25 billion valuation. Still, the project’s long time frame and high costs concerned Uber’s investors SoftBank Group Corp., Benchmark and others, who for months have been privately urging Khosrowsha­hi to reconsider the autonomous driving strategy.

During ATG’s short history, it has made progress building and testing autonomous driving systems, but also struggled amid a damaging lawsuit brought by Waymo, a tragic pedestrian fatality caused by one of its autonomous cars and the sector-wide reckoning that even the most basic selfdrivin­g vehicles will take significan­tly more time and money to develop than previously expected.

Announcing the news in a joint statement after market closed Monday, Aurora and Uber said the group will focus on driverless trucking first and later more complicate­d light vehicles carrying passengers.

“It works well for both of us,” said Aurora CEO Chris Urmson in an interview Monday. “We’re excited to have

them team with us, and we’re excited to have Dara join our board. ”Aurora’s co- founders have a deep history in the self- driving industry. Urmson previously led Google’s selfdrivin­g team, which became Way mo. Sterling Anderson directed Tesla Inc.’ s autopilot ef for ts, Chief Technology Officer Drew Bagnell, an associate professor at Carnegie Mellon Universit y, was part of the 2015 academic exodus that formed the Uber’s ATG team.

Bag nell lef t ATG to co- found Aurora. Aurora earlier this summer expanded testing on public roads from California and Pennsylvan­ia to include Texas with an initial focus on completing longhaul, commercial trips instead of the more complicate­d urban maneuvers where there are more variables and opportunit­ies for failure. Having raised $765 million from investors including Index Ventures, Sequoia Capital, T. Rowe Price and Hyundai Motor Co., Aurora was valued at more than $ 3 billion last year, according to research firm PitchBook.Amazon.com Inc., which purchased its own self- driving startup, Zoox, earlier this year, is also an investor.

Aurora has roughly 600 employees, while Uber’s ATG g roup ha s about 1,200 employees, many of them based in Pittsburgh.

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 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Uber’s driverless car unit, Advanced Technologi­es Group, is a subsidiary, created just before Uber went public last year with its own $7.25 billion valuation. The project’s long time frame and high costs have concerned Uber’s investors.
GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Uber’s driverless car unit, Advanced Technologi­es Group, is a subsidiary, created just before Uber went public last year with its own $7.25 billion valuation. The project’s long time frame and high costs have concerned Uber’s investors.

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