Dec. 29, 2023Uber partners with Waymo in Arizona to offer autonomous ridesPHOENIX – Calling an Uber doesn't necessarily mean calling an Uber driver any more in the Valley. Uber, the ride-hailing company, and Waymo, one of the companies seeking...
Dec. 29, 2023
Uber partners with Waymo in Arizona to offer autonomous rides
PHOENIX – Calling an Uber doesn't necessarily mean calling an Uber driver any more in the Valley. Uber, the ride-hailing company, and Waymo, one of the companies seeking to popularize driverless cars, announced in late October that Uber customers will have the option of getting "a fully autonomous, all-electric Waymo ride – with no human driver behind the wheel" in those parts of metro Phoenix where Waymo operates. When riders request one of four different types of rides through the Uber app, they could be matched with a driverless Waymo vehicle. They will then have the option of confirming the Waymo ride or declining it and getting a ride with a human driver instead. “Our partnership with Uber gives their riders the chance to experience the Waymo Driver,” said Waymo Co-CEO Tekedra Mawakana in the statement announcing the option. “As we continue to scale, we want as many people as possible to experience the safety, consistency and delight of riding with the Waymo Driver.” [related-story-right box-title="Related story" link="https://cronkitenews.azpbs.org/2020/12/23/waymos-fully-driverless-cars-available-in-chandler-mesa-tempe/" image="https://cronkitenews.azpbs.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/waymo_minivan_7-800x500-1.jpg" headline="Waymo’s driverless ride service moves metro Phoenix toward autonomous future"] In 2017, Waymo launched its early rider program in Chandler. Waymo now provides more than 10,000 rides each week in the region. “I took a ride in a driverless Waymo and I was so anxious before it started but quickly decided it is a great way to travel,” Chandler resident Lenora Treacy said, noting it was a “clean luxurious vehicle, and traffic rules were followed flawlessly.” Treacy went on to say in a November interview: “There's no strange driver picking me up, no worries about the driver's state of mind, ego, road rage or possible intoxication. I’ve been on plenty of taxi rides that would turn your hair gray.” The Uber-Waymo announcement came as Cruise, the driverless vehicle division of General Motors, paused driverless operations nationwide, in the wake of a California accident where one of its cars struck and dragged a pedestrian 20 feet. By contrast, in January 2023, Waymo reached 1 million miles on public roads with no humans behind the wheel and published a research paper that summarized collisions. In those first million miles, there were 20 collisions since 2020 in California and Arizona, nine of which had no damage. There were no reported injuries, and only two collisions met the criteria for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s Crash Investigation Sampling System database for car crashes, according to the report. This database consists of crashes that were reported to the police and in which at least one vehicle had to be towed away. [caption id="attachment_223498" align="alignright" width="1024"]