The race to fully-driverless trucks is heating up. Daimler, the Mercedes-Benz parent company, has inked a strategic partnership to integrate Waymo’s autonomous driving technology in its vehicles. It marks Waymo’s first deal in the freight business.
Daimler-Waymo Strategic Partnership
The partnership comes on the heels of Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ:GOOGL)’s subsidiary, Waymo, testing its autonomous technology considered to be one of the most advanced in a small fleet of Waymo’s Peterbilt trucks. The company has already retrofitted autonomous driving sensors and software in trucks currently undergoing tests in Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas.
The truck that the two are developing will come equipped with level 4 autonomous technology. This means the trucks drive themselves without human intervention. The self-driving trucks should be available in the U.S market in the coming years.
The Waymo- Daimler partnership is not an exclusive deal. Waymo AV technology has already elicited strong demand, resulting in deals with Nissan-Renault, Fiat Chrysler, and Volvo's likes. Daimler has also inked deals through its self-driving subsidiary Torc Robotics.
Self-Driving Trucks Push
The partnership does not come as a surprise, given the wave of consolidation in the auto industry. Companies are increasingly coming together to share resources and technology, all in the effort of coming up with an effective autonomous driving technology.
Similarly, a number of companies have suffered major blows on the development of self-driving trucks. Uber was forced to quit the push for autonomous cars after one of its test-vehicles killed a pedestrian in Arizona. Starsky Robotics is one of the startups that have gone under due to lack of funding to bring its technology to fruition.
Focus on self-driving trucks does not come as a surprise. In the U.S alone, over $700 billion is spent on the trucking industry each year. The fact that there is a huge shortage of drivers explains why companies move with speed to come up with self-driving trucks.