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Waymo leads autonomous taxi race in the US

Waymo leads autonomous taxi race in the US

France 244 days ago

As Tesla preps to launch its first driverless taxi service in Austin, Texas, this month after numerous delays, Waymo already claims to have more than 250,000 weekly rides across Phoenix, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Austin (in a partnership with Uber).
In San Francisco, locals barely notice the steering wheels turning by themselves anymore, with Waymo's fleet of Jaguars also available in parts of Silicon Valley.
But for tourists and business travelers, their first Waymo ride often becomes the most memorable part of a trip to the Golden Gate city.
In Los Angeles, the vehicles also became a target of protesters against the White House's immigration policies, who set Waymos on fire or covered them in graffiti.
That blip aside, Waymo has been going from strength to strength, with the company -- a subsidiary of Google-parent Alphabet -- capturing 27 percent of San Francisco's market share, according to YipitData.
The data shows that Waymo has surpassed Lyft, the United States' second-largest ride-hailing service, in the city, while Uber maintains a dominant 50-plus percent market share.
Remarkably, Waymo only launched commercial service in San Francisco in 2023 and opened to the general public just one year ago.
"People quickly feel comfortable because they perceive these cars as safer than human-driven vehicles," explained Billy Riggs, an engineering professor at the University of San Francisco who studies such vehicles and their integration into daily life.
Better than humans
Despite typically higher fares than Uber and longer wait times, Riggs's research reveals that more than a third of users earn less than $100,000 annually –- the median salary in the tech capital.
Three factors drive this success: safety, the absence of a driver (no need to haggle over what music to play), and well-maintained vehicles.
According to a recent Waymo study covering more than 90 million kilometers (56 million miles) of driving, their autonomous vehicles achieved a 92 percent reduction in pedestrian-involved accidents and a 96 percent reduction in injury-causing collisions at intersections.
"Even when humans challenge them, the vehicles don't respond aggressively. They're better versions of ourselves," Riggs joked.
While better than humans, these vehicles are less passive and hesitant than in their early days.
Through continuous data collection on driver behavior and algorithmic adjustments by engineers, Waymo cars have developed "humanistic driving behavior."
"That's everything from being able to creep into the intersection if there's a potential blind right turn or nudging into a left-hand turn" against oncoming traffic.
Both are legal, "but they would be seen as more aggressive, rather than defensive, human, driving maneuvers."
The vehicles have also gained recognition for their smooth accelerations and braking.
"My boys say, it's like butter. When they ride with me in our Tesla, I make them sick," he added.
$100,000 taxi
The collapse of Waymo's main competitor, Cruise -- due to high costs and following poor crisis management after a San Francisco accident -- has propelled Waymo to market leadership.
It plans to expand to Atlanta, Miami and Washington by 2026.
True large-scale deployment, however, requires adapting to different regulations and, more critically, acquiring many more vehicles.
The company currently operates 1,500 vehicles across four cities.
In early May, Waymo announced plans to build 2,000 additional electric Jaguar I-Pace vehicles next year, all equipped with autonomous driving technology.
These vehicles cost approximately $100,000 each, according to an interview with Waymo executive Dmitri Dolgov on the Shack15 Conversations podcast.
That means profitability remains a distant goal.
In the first quarter, Alphabet's "Other Bets" division, which includes Waymo, recorded net losses of $1.2 billion.
© 2025 AFP

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