It looks like the end of the road for Cruise robotaxis

Date:

Share:


Cruise

Autonomous-driving operations at Cruise look certain to end after its main backer, General Motors (GM), said it will stop funding the initiative.

GM, which has owned about 90% of Cruise since 2016, announced the decision in a statement shared on Tuesday. It follows a challenging period for Cruise after one of its autonomous cars ran over a woman after she was knocked into its path by a human-driven car in San Francisco in October 2023. The incident led to California regulators suspending Cruise’s license to test its driverless cars on the state’s streets, a decision that prompted Cruise to pause operations in other locations where it operated. It restarted low-level testing in Arizona in May 2024.

GM, which has invested billions of dollars in Cruise, said on Tuesday that it will “no longer fund Cruise’s robotaxi development work given the considerable time and resources that would be needed to scale the business, along with an increasingly competitive robotaxi market,” adding that it plans to combine Cruise and GM technical teams into a single unit that will focus on advancing autonomous and assisted driving.

“GM is committed to delivering the best driving experiences to our customers in a disciplined and capital efficient manner,” Mary Barra, CEO of GM, said in the statement. “Cruise has been an early innovator in autonomy, and the deeper integration of our teams, paired with GM’s strong brands, scale, and manufacturing strength, will help advance our vision for the future of transportation.”

Dave Richardson, senior vice president of software and services engineering at GM, said the automaker is “fully committed to autonomous driving and excited to bring GM customers its benefits — things like enhanced safety, improved traffic flow, increased accessibility, and reduced driver stress.”

Cruise has yet to comment publicly on GM’s decision to end funding and how it will impact its autonomous testing in the immediate future. The company has driverless cars on roads in Texas and Arizona, but GM’s announcement could see Cruise pause operations with immediate effect. Tech Reader has reached out to Cruise for comment and we will update this article when we hear back.

GM’s decision highlights the difficulties in making the fledgling robotaxi industry that currently comprises mostly pilot services. In a similar move, another major automaker, Ford, pulled funding for autonomous-car specialist Argo in 2022. Alphabet-backed Waymo, which tests its robotaxis in multiple cities and recently announced it will be launching in Miami, is the current leader in the field.








Source link

━ more like this

Bitcoin retreats after yesterday’s gains – London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com

Bitcoin paused on Wednesday after Tuesday’s rally. The latter temporarily lifted prices above USD 96,000, the highest level in several months. Profit-taking fuelled today’s...

You can now choose the kind of content you see on Instagram Reels

Instagram is finally letting people take the wheel of their Reels feed, instead of leaving everything up to a mysterious algorithm. After testing...

NVIDIA rolls out DLSS 4.5 to all RTX GPUs

Just a week after announcing the latest version of its image-upscaling tech at CES, NVIDIA is rolling out DLSS 4.5. The company released...

Samsung XR smart glasses leak says you may see two versions

Samsung’s Samsung XR smart glasses are starting to look like a pair, not a single product. A new leak from GalaxyClub points to...

Lidl to open more stores in London as part of a £40m expansion – London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com

Lidl has confirmed on Wednesday that they are to open 19 stores across England over the next two months and will create around...
spot_img