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

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)