Uber Eats is partnering with autonomous vehicle company Nuro for deliveries

Uber is doubling down on efforts to use autonomous vehicles for its delivery service.

The company announced today a 10-year partnership with Nuro, an autonomous electric vehicle maker. Uber Eats and Nuro will launch the delivery offering this fall in Mountain View, California, and Houston, Texas, with plans to later expand its service to the greater Bay Area.

Uber has been turning to partnerships to cement its presence in the autonomous last-mile delivery space. The company is testing autonomous vehicle delivery in Santa Monica through a deal with Motional. Uber spin-off Serve Robotics, which makes sidewalk delivery robots, is also working with Uber Eats on a Los Angeles pilot.

An Uber spokesperson tells Fast Company that it will continue to work with multiple third-party autonomous delivery companies rather than contract with just one. “This third-party approach allows us to scale Uber’s delivery network, while working with leaders in the autonomous space,” the spokesperson says.

[Photo: courtesy of Uber]
Founded in 2016 by two former Waymo workers, Nuro’s autonomous vehicles aren’t the average car found on the road. The company built the bots specifically to carry food and other goods, and they don’t have space for humans onboard (or a steering wheel, at that). The small vehicles still travel on public roads, though, so remote Nuro operators can patch into the vehicle and assume control if needed.

Food delivery companies have long had an eye on using autonomous vehicles and bots for last-mile delivery. DoorDash, for example, in 2021 revealed DoorDash Labs, its robotics and automation arm that was operating in stealth for three years. Grubhub, owned by Just Eat Takeaway, in June also announced a partnership with self-driving robotics startup Cartken to deliver goods on college campuses.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90786545/uber-eats-is-partnering-with-autonomous-vehicle-company-nuro-for-deliveries?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Vytvorené 3y | 8. 9. 2022, 13:22:45


Ak chcete pridať komentár, prihláste sa

Ostatné príspevky v tejto skupine

This DOGE staffer’s GitHub posts might help us understand how Elon Musk wants to bring AI into the government

The internet posts and side projects of Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) worker Jordan Wick could give some clues for how Musk’s

4. 3. 2025, 23:10:02 | Fast company - tech
Casey Anthony joins TikTok and Substack to ‘advocate’ for herself

More than a decade after Casey Anthony was accused of murdering her daughter in one of the country’s most notorious murder cases, this weekend she emerged on TikTok to reintroduce herself. 

4. 3. 2025, 20:40:05 | Fast company - tech
Elon Musk’s bumbling X posts are inadvertently teaching everyone how government works

If what you don’t know can’t hurt you, Elon Musk may be in luck. With a series of candid posts on X, the White House’s resident broligarch has lately been divulging which aspects of civics and dat

4. 3. 2025, 18:30:02 | Fast company - tech
TikTok’s ‘airport theory’ dares you to arrive just 15 minutes before your flight

When it comes to airports, travelers tend to fall into two camps. There are the anxious types who show up four hours early, with plenty of time to leisurely peruse duty-free and enjoy the airport

4. 3. 2025, 16:10:09 | Fast company - tech
Uber will now pair Austin riders with Waymo self-driving cars

Starting today, if you call an Uber in Austin you can match with a self-driving Waymo vehicle. 

The launch in the Texas capital is part of an expanded partnership between the two te

4. 3. 2025, 16:10:08 | Fast company - tech
Used Tesla prices depreciated more than any other automaker in 2024

The price of used Tesla’s Model 3 and Model Y vehicles depreciated more than any other cars in 2024, according to a Fast Company analysis of CarGurus data.

The average pri

4. 3. 2025, 16:10:07 | Fast company - tech
Mozilla’s new message: We’re the only browser not backed by billionaires

As frustration with corporate power grows under the oligarch-friendly Trump administration, Mozilla Firefox

4. 3. 2025, 16:10:05 | Fast company - tech