National Post (National Edition)

Robotaxi era starts meter at Vegas CES

AUTOMAKERS HAVE SHIFTED GEARS IN DRIVERLESS SPHERE FROM LUXURY DEMOS TO UTILITARIA­N PEOPLE MOVERS.

- Christoph rauwald

Four years ago, Daimler AG dazzled with a self-driving luxury lounge in Las Vegas with a concept vehicle boasting a sleek interior that promised to pamper its wellheeled passengers into the automotive future.

This year the MercedesBe­nz maker is back at the annual consumer electronic­s show CES, though with a more utilitaria­n slant: a bubble-shaped autonomous shuttle designed to reliably ferry people and goods around town at limited speeds.

The move from glittery luxury concepts to box-shaped people movers underscore­s a shift in the race toward autonomous vehicles.

While driverless cars might not populate public roads for some time, shuttle services in confined areas have started to look more feasible, at least over the next few years.

“These vehicles have moderate technical complexity and drive at low speeds, which makes them easier to produce than convention­al cars,” Wolfgang Bernhart, partner at consultanc­y Roland Berger Gmbh, said in a phone interview. “The potential for special-purpose vehicles and autonomous driving as a whole is significan­t.”

Sales of autonomous shuttles will reach about 1 million vehicles in 2020 and could more than double to 2.5 million by 2025, Roland Berger estimates. While only a fraction of global car deliveries, it beats last year’s sales at Mercedes, the world’s best-selling luxury-car maker.

Here’s a rundown of some of the main concepts being shown at CES this year and elsewhere:

DAIMLER’S VISION URBANETIC

On-demand mobility for as many as 12 people; electrical­ly-powered chassis has switchable bodies to transform into a cargo-version sibling.

BOSCH’S DRIVERLESS SHUTTLE

Concept designed for four people; concierge service provides reservatio­ns, recommenda­tions, travel tips; users able to pay via Bosch’s e-payment service.

VOLKSWAGEN’S SEDRIC

Latest concepts are a mini school bus, or autonomous taxi for four; suitable for car sharing or personal use; likely to hit roads around 2025.

MAY MOBILITY

BMW Ag-backed startup ferrying Detroit workers from a parking garage to offices; six-seater electric vehicles still have attendant on board; shuttles operate on loop on downtown Detroit public roads.

Other contenders include Continenta­l AG’S Cube autonomous shuttle, and ZF Friedrichs­hafen, another large German auto parts supplier, which has teamed up with startup e.go Mobile AG to start making driverless vehicles from late 2019.

ZF said on Monday it’s landed an order from French transporta­tion-systems company Transdev and plans to expand production capacity in Germany to more than 10,000 vehicles a year, citing strong interest from both mobility providers and cities. The unlisted manufactur­er also is showcasing an autonomous ride-hailing van at CES to demonstrat­e the company’s capabiliti­es at integratin­g sensors like radar and cameras.

Technical hurdles remain substantia­l for self-drives facing situations on public roads that are often difficult to predict. Bosch and Daimler have started a joint test using an automated ridesharin­g service using Mercedes S-class sedans in San Jose, Calif.

“We remain realistic that robo business models will still take a material amount of time and significan­t tech improvemen­ts in order to be deployed at scale and with a profit,” Arndt Ellinghors­t, a London-based analyst at Evercore ISI, said in a note to clients. “It is now well understood that the risk of sitting on the fence is too large,” he said.

 ?? JOHN LOCKER / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Mercedes-benz Vision Urbanetic on display at the Consumer Electronic­s Show in Las Vegas.
JOHN LOCKER / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Mercedes-benz Vision Urbanetic on display at the Consumer Electronic­s Show in Las Vegas.
 ?? JOHN LOCHER / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Mercedes-benz Vision Urbanetic on display at the at CES Internatio­nal in Las Vegas.
JOHN LOCHER / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Mercedes-benz Vision Urbanetic on display at the at CES Internatio­nal in Las Vegas.

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