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GM’s Cruise Shows Off Its Self-Driving Origin Shuttle With No Room for a Driver

Cruise LLC will show its first vehicle designed to operate without a driver on Tuesday.

GM’s Cruise Shows Off Its Self-Driving Origin Shuttle With No Room for a Driver
A teaser image of a purpose-built autonomous vehicle for Cruise that GM released in 2018. (Source: General Motors)

(Bloomberg) -- Cruise LLC, the autonomous-car startup majority-owned by General Motors Co., unveiled its all-electric self-driving shuttle and announced that the vehicle is headed for production.

The shuttle, called Origin, is designed to be more spacious and passenger-friendly than a conventional, human-driven car. The silver, squared-off vehicle lacks traditional controls like pedals and a steering wheel, freeing up room for multiple people to share rides, Cruise Chief Executive Officer Dan Ammann said Tuesday at an event in San Francisco.

GM’s Cruise Shows Off Its Self-Driving Origin Shuttle With No Room for a Driver

As a vehicle, the Origin is a step for Cruise and GM to get into selling services. But as a strategy, the idea is much greater. If it works, the companies could develop a lucrative business that extricates transportation systems from their over-reliance on cars that pollute the air, congest roadways and cause traffic deaths.

Ammann said the vehicle, developed by Cruise, GM and Honda Motor Co., will cost half what a conventional sport utility vehicle does, making it inexpensive for Cruise to deploy. It can run for 1 million miles and will operate day and night, constantly bringing in revenue, he said. Passengers will like it because it’s roomier than a Chrysler Pacifica minivan but $5,000 cheaper per year than owning a car.

“It’s affordable and it’s right for you,” Ammann said. “It’s electric and shared and that’s right for the world.”

Tough Path

Yet big challenges remain. It hasn’t been an easy ride for Cruise or any of the technology companies vying to be the first to build a self-driving car business. Many, including Cruise, have had delays. The company postponed plans to operate a robotaxi service by the end of last year and hasn’t publicly set a new date by which it aims to be ready to run one.

GM CEO Mary Barra, who made the automaker’s $1.5 billion purchase of Cruise in 2016, said last year that the company would prioritize safety over quick deployment. Cruise then put off public services. The technology still hasn’t proven that it can drive better than humans. The state of California, where Cruise wants to start its business, also has not yet finished rules to allow companies to charge for self-driving car rides.

There is plenty of competition, including Argo AI, which has partnered with Ford Motor Co. and Volkswagen AG, and Waymo, the self-driving car unit of Alphabet Inc. All of the companies are racing to develop the best self-driving system and build a brand name the way ride-hailing companies Uber Technologies Inc. and Lyft Inc. have.

GM’s Cruise Shows Off Its Self-Driving Origin Shuttle With No Room for a Driver

Ride Service

The Origin is trying to change the whole idea of a passenger vehicle. At least four people can fit in the shuttle facing each other while the vehicle drives itself. Unlike many autonomous test vehicles, the sensors and lidar that act as the vehicle’s eyes are better integrated into the body of the vehicle.

Ammann said Cruise will first start its ride-sharing service with the modified Chevrolet Bolt compact cars it’s been testing for years. Before long, the Origin will be deployed to pick up passengers. Ammann said GM will announce production details in the coming days.

While he wouldn’t get into details, Ammann said it won’t take too many vehicles on the road to get the ride-sharing business to a scale of use that can be profitable.

Common Good

For Cruise, the key will be getting people to give up personal transportation. The Origin has comfortable gray cloth seats and leg room for very tall passengers. But it’s still shared, and Ammann acknowledged that people will have to give up riding alone for the common good.

“There’s an inherent tension between what’s good for us and what’s good for the rest of the world,” Ammann said. “We know the bus is better for the environment. Most of us are still burning up the atmosphere with gasoline because EVs aren’t yet affordable.”

Compared with owning a car, using Cruise’s service will save $5,000 a year, according to the company. If enough people use it, congestion will be reduced on the roads and in parking lots. Plus, Cruise’s fleet will offer a more consistent ride than Uber and Lyft, which have thousands of different drivers and cars providing service, Ammann said.

“What’s it going to be: Convenience or climate? Time or money? Speed or safety?” Ammann asked. Then he made his pitch: “What if you didn’t have to choose?”

To contact the reporter on this story: David Welch in Southfield at dwelch12@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Craig Trudell at ctrudell1@bloomberg.net, Ville Heiskanen, Will Davies

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