The Palm Beach Post

Hyundai, VW ink self-drive car deal

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DETROIT — Hyundai and Volkswagen on Thursday said they are partnering with a U.S. autonomous vehicle tech firm led by former executives from Google, Tesla and Uber.

The companies announced partnershi­ps with Aurora Innovation, started last year by ex-Google autonomous car chief Chris Urmson and others.

VW says its collaborat­ion will help bring self-driving cars quickly to roads worldwide, while autonomous Hyundais are expected to be on the market by 2021.

The partnershi­ps are the latest in a string of tie-ups between traditiona­l auto companies and tech firms as they race to be first with self-driving vehicles.

Aurora is based in Pittsburgh and Palo Alto, Calif. It was started last year by Urmson, former Tesla executive Sterling Anderson, and former Uber autonomous vehicle leader Drew Bagnell.

Terms of each partnershi­p were not released.

Urmson left Alphabet Inc.’s Google in 2016 after more than seven years of work on its autonomous vehicles.

At Tesla Inc., Anderson led developmen­t of the company’s semi-autonomous Autopilot system after its initial release, and he led developmen­t of the Model X SUV, according to Aurora’s website.

Bagnell was a founding member of Uber Technologi­es Inc.’s Advanced Technology Center, which is working on autonomous cars in Pittsburgh.

Germany-based Volkswagen AG, which produces about 10 million vehicles annually, hopes the tie-up will bring autonomous vehicle technology to all of its brands.

The company says it has been working with Aurora for the past six months, integratin­g its sensors, hardware and software into VW vehicles.

Hyundai Motor Co. said the partnershi­p with Aurora will bring autonomous vehicles to market that can operate without human input in most conditions.

The partnershi­p has yet to say how the first self-driving vehicles will be used, but analysts expect they will likely be for commercial use, such as self-driving taxis or ride-hailing services, rather than for sales to individual consumers. General Motors said in November that its self-driving vehicles will carry passengers and deliver goods in big cities by 2019.

Hyundai earlier joined with Cisco Systems Inc. and Baidu Inc. to collaborat­e on internet-connected cars. It has also set up a $45 million fund with South Korea’s SK Telecom and Hanwha Asset Management to invest in artificial intelligen­ce startups worldwide.

The South Korean automaker plans to share more details of its project with Aurora during the Consumer Electronic­s Show in Las Vegas next week, where it will also unveil the brand name of a new fuel-cell SUV that will be tested for self-driving technology.

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