Uber commits $10 billion to robotaxis in strategy shift, FT says


Seats with Uber logos are seen inside a helicopter operated by Uber Copter, a new service by the ride-sharing company Uber, providing service from Manhattan to New York's JFK International Airport initially for Diamond and Platinum Uber Rewards members as well as special Uber partners in New York, U.S., October 2, 2019. Picture taken October 2, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Segar

April 15 (Reuters) - Uber ⁠has committed more than $10 billion to buying ⁠thousands of autonomous vehicles and taking stakes in ‌their developers, breaking from its asset-light "gig economy" business model to avoid disruption from robotaxis, the Financial Times reported on ​Wednesday.

Reuters could not immediately verify the ⁠report. Uber did ⁠not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Uber ⁠is ‌positioning itself as a marketplace for multiple robotaxi operators, and has partnered across ⁠much of the autonomous vehicle industry, including ​with, Baidu, Rivian ‌and Lucid, and has outlined plans to ⁠launch robotaxi ​services in at least 28 cities by 2028.

These deals put Uber on track to invest more than $2.5 ⁠billion in equity stakes and spend ​over $7.5 billion on robotaxi fleets in the next few years, FT reported citing their calculations based on ⁠analyst estimates and people familiar with Uber's deals. The agreements are contingent on its partners hitting certain deployment milestones.

Interest in driverless taxis has surged ​in recent months after years ⁠of missed promises, with artificial intelligence and tech partnerships ​offering hopes of solving complex ‌traffic scenarios faster and mitigating ​high costs.

(Reporting by Disha Mishra in Bengaluru; Editing by Sonia Cheema and Nivedita Bhattacharjee)

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