The Mercury News

Uber jettisons flying car project to Joby Aviation

Company agrees to invest $75 million in air-taxi startup

- By Cade Metz

A day after Uber handed its autonomous car project to a Silicon Valley startup, the company is doing the same with an ambitious and money-intensive effort to build flying cars.

Uber is handing its flying car project, Uber Elevate, to the air taxi startup Joby Aviation, the two companies said Tuesday. Uber will also invest $75 million in Joby’s effort to build a flying taxi, while agreeing to become partners with the startup when the flying car reaches the market.

By taking the two technology projects off the books,

Uber management, under pressure to make the company profitable, is dumping initiative­s that critics said were money pits while focusing on the company’s core ride-hailing service and one of the few bright spots in the pandemic: a fastgrowin­g delivery service. Uber recently completed the acquisitio­n of its competitor Postmates, allowing the company to double down on deliveries.

Air taxis, like autonomous cars, are unlikely to make a significan­t impact for several years, and their yearly developmen­t costs run into the tens of millions, if not hundreds of millions.

“I know there are questions about whether Uber has any ‘ big, bold’ bets left,” the Uber chief executive, Dara Khosrowsha­hi, said in an email to company employees that was viewed by

The New York Times. “I understand that question, but I think it misses the big, bold bets right in front of us: to become the undisputed global leaders in both Mobility and Delivery.”

The company declined to comment further.

The deal is also an indication that the air taxi industry, which has been buoyed by enormous hype and investment over the past several years, is consolidat­ing around a smaller group of companies. Investment­s are being funneled to a select group of players, said Asad Hussain, an analyst with Pitchbook, a research firm that tracks financial activity.

In 2020, nearly $1 billion has been invested in this kind of “air mobility” company, according to Pitchbook.

With the new investment from Uber, Joby Aviation, based in Santa Cruz, California, has raised more than $820 million. The company is trying to build an air taxi service that provides an alternativ­e to overly crowded roadways in large urban areas. It hopes to start a service in at least one city by 2023. But first, government regulators must approve the use of its aircraft, which is a cross between a plane and helicopter that takes off vertically.

When the service begins, it will dovetail with Uber’s ride-hailing service, said the Joby executive chairman, Paul Sciarra. In other words, each company will offer an app that will let customers hail rides through the other.

Joby is acquiring Uber Elevate’s technology and its engineerin­g staff. Sciarra declined to say how much Joby paid for the unit. But if the deal was structured

like Uber’s agreement with Aurora, a self- driving car startup, the answer is likely zero.

On Monday, Aurora said it was taking on Uber’s autonomous vehicle unit but wasn’t paying for it. Like Joby, it received a significan­t investment from Uber and the promise of a partnershi­p.

Uber’s decision to offload its air taxi effort shows just how expensive and difficult such an effort will be in the years to come, said Mark Groden, chief executive of Skyryse, another company exploring new kinds of urban air transporta­tion.

“Cracking this market requires a lot of technology that hasn’t been invented yet,” he said. “It is not a simple business.”

 ?? ROBYN BECK — AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? The Hyundai S-A1 electric Urban Air Mobility concept was being worked on for Uber Elevate’s project. Air taxis, like autonomous cars, are unlikely to make a significan­t impact for several years.
ROBYN BECK — AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE VIA GETTY IMAGES The Hyundai S-A1 electric Urban Air Mobility concept was being worked on for Uber Elevate’s project. Air taxis, like autonomous cars, are unlikely to make a significan­t impact for several years.

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