By Abhirup Roy
SAN FRANCISCO, June 3 (Reuters) – Uber has committed close to half a billion dollars in self-driving startup Nuro, two sources directly aware of the matter told Reuters, detailing the โextent of a major investment by the ride-hailing company in developing commercial robotaxis.
After years of false โstarts, the robotaxi industry is re-accelerating development, testing and early commercial deployment, led by companies including Tesla, Alphabet’s Waymo and Amazon’s Zoox.
Uber has โbeen positioning itself as a platform for the nascent industry and has partnered with many autonomous vehicle companies, including Chinese tech giant Baidu, U.S. electric vehicle maker Rivian, and British startup Wayve. It also is working with Waymo in some U.S. cities.
One of Uber’s commitments is a three-way partnership with Nuro and electric vehicle company Lucid to roll โout 35,000 robotaxis using Lucid’s Gravity โ SUVs and upcoming midsize vehicles, Nuro’s technology and Uber’s platform.
The size and details of Uber’s financial commitment to Nuro have not been reported previously and reveal the full scale โ of the financial ties binding the firms.
Uber previously had reported investing $500 million in Lucid and planning a multi-hundred-million dollar investment in Nuro, including participating in a $203 million funding round for Nuro that valued the Silicon Valley startup at $6 billion.
Uber has โsince โmade an unreported follow-on investment in Nuro significantly larger than โits first funding, both the sources said, declining โto be named. Uber had also agreed to provide additional funding for Nuro once it hit certain development and commercial milestones, without disclosing terms. Together these commitments tally nearly $500 million.
The first few milestones have already been met on time, triggering the release of some funds from Uber, one of the sources told Reuters.
The remaining money is tied to targets including testing without a driver, planned for later this year, carrying passengers in those driverless โcars, expected by the end of this year, and ramping up โthe service next year, the source said.
Uber and Nuro declined to โcomment.
For Nuro, the funding provides crucial runway โas it works to prove out its technology at commercial scale. The company initially made โsmall delivery bots before pivoting in 2024 to โlicensing its self-driving software to โcarmakers and mobility companies.
The company is currently testing with safety drivers and the service is expected to launch in the San Francisco Bay Area later this year.