Summary:
- Waymo
robotaxis double driverless miles to 100 mln in about six months
- "Methodical
progress now accelerating into rapid, responsible scaling" - Waymo
official
- Completed
over 10 mln autonomous trips as of May, up from 5 mln end of 2024
SAN FRANCISCO, July 15 (Reuters) - Alphabet's (GOOGL.O)
Waymo robotaxis have driven more than 100 million miles without a human behind the wheel, doubling the mileage in about six months, a top company official said, as it speeds up deployment in U.S. cities amid rising competition.
Rival Tesla (TSLA.O) is expanding its self-driving taxi service after a small trial with about a dozen of its Model Y SUVs in a limited area of Austin, Texas last month.
While Tesla CEO Elon Musk has said Tesla will scale up the service rapidly and launch in several U.S. cities by the end of 2025, Waymo has been expanding its service cautiously for years. With about 1,500 vehicles, it is available in San Francisco and some other Bay Area cities, Los Angeles, Phoenix, Austin and Atlanta.
"Reaching 100 million fully autonomous miles represents years of methodical progress now accelerating into rapid, responsible scaling," said Waymo's chief product officer, Saswat Panigrahi.
"As we expand to serve more riders in more cities, we'll encounter new challenges that will continue strengthening our service."
Waymo had logged about 71 million autonomous miles (114.3 million km) as of March, up from 50 million miles at the end of 2024 and 25 million miles through July 2024. It had completed its first million miles in January 2023.
"This type of milestone helps extend Waymo's lead over other self-driving services, because the cumulative experience of those hundred million miles is important," D.A. Davidson analyst Gil Luria said.
No comments:
Post a Comment