USA TODAY US Edition

Self-driving trucks are on the road in Arizona

Uber has used them for deliveries since Nov.

- Marco della Cava

SAN FRANCISCO – Uber has been sending self-driving trucks on delivery runs across Arizona since November, the first step in what promises to be a freight transporta­tion revolution that could radically reshape the jobs of long-haul truckers.

After testing its technology earlier in 2017, Uber began contractin­g with trucking companies to use its own autonomous Volvo big rigs to take over loads as they traverse the state, it disclosed.

In Uber’s current program, a trucker meets the self-driving truck at the Arizona state border, which then takes the load across the state before handing it off to a second convention­al trucker for the short-haul trip. During the autonomous trip, an Uber employee rides in the driver seat of the autonomous truck to monitor — but not to drive.

If one day both the technology and regulation­s play out in favor of selfdrivin­g trucks, two scenarios emerge.

The first would find self-driving trucks handling long-haul highway legs with no one at the wheel as they meet up with convention­al truckers, who then drive the deliveries into city centers. The other possibilit­y is Uber could sell its technology to trucking owner-operators, who then use it to sleep while the truck handles the bulk of long-distance driving.

Truckers make their money only when their rigs are on the road. They are also limited by law in terms of how much time they can spend behind the wheel, something a self-driving truck could impact positively. It could also introduce more round-trip hauls that find a driver back home at the end of the day’s journey.

“The big step for us recently is that we can plan to haul goods in both directions, using Uber Freight to coordinate load pickups and dropoffs with local truckers,” said Alden Woodrow, who leads Uber’s self-driving truck effort. “Keeping trucking local allows these drivers to make money while staying closer to home.”

Uber Freight, which launched last May, is an app that matches shippers with loads using technology drawn from Uber’s ride-hailing app. Typically such trucking logistics have been coordinate­d through phone calls and emails.

The San Francisco-based company isn’t alone in its pursuit of self-driving truck technology, with start-ups such as Embark joining companies such as Tesla and its new Tesla Semi to carve out a slice of a $700 billion industry that moves 70% of all domestic freight, according to the American Trucking Associatio­n.

Despite the push, the technology behind self-driving trucks remains in its infancy, with hurdles that include government regulation­s and trucker buyin. A truck that makes the long hauls between exits, allowing a driver to sleep in the cab, could increase their profit. But they’d have to trust the technology, as well as fork over what promises to be a considerab­le investment to make their cabs autonomous.

Technology may be for sale

Woodrow says Uber’s trucking plans remain in developmen­t, but he does not see the company running a fleet of selfdrivin­g trucks — which would imply that its technology would be available for purchase from large, establishe­d shipping companies.

“Today we’re operating our own trucks, but in the future it remains to be seen what happens,” he says. “Trucking is a very large and sophistica­ted business with a lot of companies in the value chain who are good at what they do. So our desire is to partner.”

Uber’s current Arizona pilot program does not feature trucks making end-to-end runs from pickup to delivery because it’s tough to make huge trucks navigate urban traffic on their own.

Instead, Uber’s Volvo trucks receive loads at state border weigh stations. These trucks are equipped with hardware, software and an array of sensors developed by Uber’s Advanced Technologi­es Group that help the truck make what amounts to a glorified cruise-control run across the state. Uber ATG also is behind ongoing self-driving car testing in Arizona, Pennsylvan­ia and San Francisco.

Uber did not disclose what items it is transporti­ng for which companies.

Once the Uber trucks exit at the next highway hub near the Arizona border, they are met by a different set of truckers who hitch the trailer to own their cab to finish the delivery.

The idea is that truckers get to go home to their families instead of being on the road. In a video Uber created to tout the program, the company showcases a California trucker who, once at the Arizona border, hands his trailer over to an Uber self-driving truck for its trip east, while picking up a different load that needs to head back to California.

States adapting rules

Autonomous vehicles are being pursued by dozens of companies ranging from large automakers to technology start-ups. Slowly, states are adapting their rules to try to be on the front lines of a potential transporta­tion shift.

Michigan, California and Arizona, for example, have been constantly updating their autonomous car testing laws in order to court companies working on such tech.

California recently joined Arizona in announcing that it would allow selfdrivin­g cars to be tested without a driver at the wheel.

Skeptics of the self-driving gold rush include the Consumer Watchdog Group’s John Simpson, who in a recent letter to lawmakers said “any autonomous vehicle legislatio­n should require a human driver behind a steering wheel capable of taking control.”

Uber’s announceme­nt aims to cast a positive light on the company’s trucking efforts and comes a few weeks after it settled a contentiou­s year-old lawsuit brought by Waymo, the name of Google’s self-driving car program.

 ?? GREGORY MURPHY ?? During the trip, an Uber employee rides in the driver’s seat of the autonomous truck to monitor — but not to drive.
GREGORY MURPHY During the trip, an Uber employee rides in the driver’s seat of the autonomous truck to monitor — but not to drive.
 ?? GREGORY MURPHY ?? Uber’s current Arizona pilot program does not feature trucks making end-to-end runs.
GREGORY MURPHY Uber’s current Arizona pilot program does not feature trucks making end-to-end runs.

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