Argo AI, Lyft and Ford Motor Company said today are working together to commercialize autonomous ride hailing at scale. The collaboration in theory provides all of the ingredients necessary to create a viable autonomous ride hailing service. These include self-driving technology, a vehicle fleet and transportation network needed to support what’s hoped to be a growing business and satisfied riders. (Lyft and Motional to Deploy Fully Self-Driving Vehicles in 2023, Volkswagen, Argo AI to Start Autonomous Driving Tests, Milestones: Volkswagen Completes Promised Argo AI Funding, Ford and Austin Launch Mobility Challenge Program, Ford Smart Mobility, Zotye Ink MOU on Chinese Ride Hailing)
Argo AI and Ford will deploy Ford self-driving cars, with safety drivers, on the Lyft network, as part of a network access agreement, with passenger rides beginning in Miami later this year and in Austin starting in 2022. As vehicles are positioned, Lyft users within the defined service areas will be able to select a Ford self-driving vehicle to hail a ride. “This initial deployment phase will lay the groundwork for scaling operations, as the parties are now working to finalize agreements aiming to deploy at least 1,000 autonomous vehicles on the Lyft network, across multiple markets over the next five years,” the companies claimed.
To support self-driving vehicle deployments at scale, Ford has established a presence in Miami, Austin and Washington, D.C. This includes operations to support commercial fleets, including fueling, servicing and cleaning. Ford says it also has established community relationships, including “working closely with city leaders to provide valuable mobility solutions to meet their unique needs.”
The collaboration is designed to scale autonomous vehicle deployment using market and safety data that helps define where self-driving technology can safely serve consumers. As part of the agreement, Argo will use anonymized service and fleet data from Lyft to overcome the challenges faced by other autonomous vehicle companies by focusing on where they can build a sustainable business and validate deployment through localized safety data. In addition, Lyft will receive 2.5% of the common equity of Argo AI as part of the licensing and data access agreements to collaborate on the safe commercialization of autonomous vehicles.
“Argo and Ford are currently piloting, mapping and preparing for commercial operations of autonomous vehicles in more cities than any other AV collaboration, and this new agreement is a crucial step toward full commercial operations – the addition of Lyft’s world-class transportation network,” said Scott Griffith, CEO, Ford Autonomous Vehicles & Mobility Businesses. “These three companies share a belief that autonomous vehicles will be a key enabler for a cleaner, safer and more efficient urban mobility landscape. This is the beginning of an important relationship between three dynamic companies ultimately aiming to deliver a trusted, high-quality experience for riders in a multi-city large scale operation over time.”
California Greenhouse Gases – Emissions Drop Continues
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The California Air Resources Board today released greenhouse gas (GHG) inventory data for 2019, showing further reductions below the AB 32 emissions reduction target. That target, a return to 1990 GHG levels, was achieved by the state four years ahead of schedule in 2016. The numbers in the new inventory show that emissions continue to fall, from 425 million metric tons in 2018 to 418 million metric tons in 2019. While progress around deployment of cleaner vehicle technology and fuels was significant, increases in per capita vehicle miles traveled (VMT) in passenger cars continued to rise slightly.
“This inventory is good news, but much larger reductions are needed to reach the ambitious 2030 target — an additional 40% reduction below the original 2020 limit,” said CARB Chair Liane M. Randolph. “We are now once again witnessing massive wildfires and recurring heat waves while large parts of our state are suffering from extreme drought. This is a clear call to redouble our efforts to protect those communities already hard hit by pollution and climate change, and to move with all possible speed to achieve carbon neutrality by mid-century as quickly as possible.” Continue reading →