Exclusive: Uber to move
freight, target trucking for the long haul
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[September 28, 2016]
By Julia Love and Heather Somerville
SAN
FRANCISCO (Reuters) - With its recent acquisition of self-driving truck
startup Otto, Uber Technologies Inc.[UBER.UL]is plotting its entry into
the long-haul trucking business, aiming to establish itself as a freight
hauler and a technology partner for the industry.
Otto plans to expand its fleet of trucks from six to about 15 and is
forging partnerships with independent truckers, Otto co-founder Lior Ron
told Reuters in an interview. Starting next year, Otto-branded trucks
and others equipped with Otto technology will begin hauling freight
bound for warehouses and stores, he said.
Uber has already started pitching services to shippers, truck fleets and
independent drivers, and the services go well beyond Otto's initially
stated goal of outfitting trucks with self-driving technology. It also
plans to compete with the brokers who connect truck fleets and shippers.
Fully autonomous trucks remain years away - some trucking industry
experts estimate two decades - and the Otto vehicles are currently
manned by a driver and an engineer. But the Uber-Otto efforts include a
host of other technologies involving navigation, mapping and tracking,
which can be deployed even as work continues on self-driving systems.
An executive at one company told Reuters he had already been approached
by Uber about hauling his goods, noting that Uber touted recent hires
and advances in trucking technology.
Uber aims to ultimately transform the competitive and fragmented $700
billion-a-year trucking industry, which is notorious for low margins.
The company is challenging a host of established players, ranging from
publicly traded companies, such as third-party logistics firms C.H.
Robinson and XPO Logistics, to countless mom-and-pop trucking
businesses.
Otto has had motor carrier permits with the U.S. Department of
Transportation and California Department of Motor Vehicles to move cargo
since earlier this year. Eleven days after the close of the Uber
acquisition last month, Otto filed for a new permit to haul freight,
noting it would expand its fleet to 15 trucks.
Ron told Reuters that Otto also aims to partner with the industry, and
that "thousands" of owner-operator truck drivers have reached out to the
company.
"We are talking with everyone," he said. "We don't want to develop
technology just for the sake of technology."
Uber - the dominant ride-hailing firm and the world's most valuable
venture-backed startup, at $68 billion - last month bought Otto in a
$680 million deal. Otto, with about 100 employees, had just launched in
January.
While Uber's brand and financial backing could supercharge Otto's
prospects, industry experts remain skeptical that a Silicon Valley
startup with little experience can shake up long-haul trucking.
"The transportation industry is a relationship-backed business," said
Kevin Abbott, a vice president at C.H. Robinson. "There's a lot more to
it than just finding a piece of equipment."
Abbott noted that Uber is just the latest in a long line of companies
that have tried to take the place of brokers, who typically match loads
with vehicles.
Uber and Otto also face competition from a growing crop of startups
eyeing the industry. Companies such as Transfix, Convoy and Cargo Chief
are aiming to unseat traditional brokers by matching shippers with
carriers using complex algorithms, while Trucker Path has built a
popular navigation app for truckers.
BRAND ADVANTAGE?
One indication of Otto's ambitions is its recent hiring of Bill Driegert,
a logistics veteran who helped found Coyote, a leading freight broker,
and served as its chief innovation officer, according to his LinkedIn
profile. Uber and Otto are working to build a freight network to connect
shippers and carriers, much like Uber matches passengers and drivers.
The trucking push is partly a gambit to leverage the mapping and
logistics expertise Uber has gained ferrying passengers and food in
cities.
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An Autonomous trucking start-up Otto vehicle is shown during an
announcing event in Concord, California, U.S. August 4, 2016.
REUTERS/Alexandria Sage/File Photo
"This
is really about connecting the dots, connecting the shippers and the carriers,"
Ron said. "We are building that on the long-haul piece. Uber, through UberRush
and UberEats, built that on the urban piece," referring to the company's
on-demand delivery services.
Self-driving trucks may eventually ease the driver shortage facing the trucking
industry. But even absent autonomous technology, Otto says it could help
decrease the cost of trucking goods by more quickly finding freight, mapping
more efficient routes and reducing fuel consumption.
"In Uber, you press a button and an Uber shows up after three minutes," Ron
said. "In freight ... the golden standard is that it takes (the broker) five
hours of phone calls to find your truck. That's how efficient the industry is
today."
Uber is hardly alone in tackling that problem. XPO Logistics - among the world's
biggest logistics services - has invested heavily in software that maximizes the
utilization of trucks and reduces fuel consumption.
C.H. Robinson has developed technology that allows companies to track their
shipments, as well as an app for carriers with small fleets.
Moreover, the model that Uber used to disrupt the taxi industry may not
translate easily to trucking, said transportation analyst Jack Atkins of
investment bank Stephens Inc. Companies avoid risk when shipping goods more than
consumers do when hailing rides, he said.
"I
don't really see it as a near-term threat, just because of how complex the
industry really is," he said. "It's not as simple as, 'Hey, I want to go from
point A to point B in Midtown.'"
LOGGING THE MILES
Ron emphasizes that Otto's autonomous driving technology is still in a "testing
regimen." The trucks can drive by themselves on highways, with two copilots as
backup, but maneuvering off the open interstate remains a challenge.
The trucks now haul random items from the company's garage to test how the
vehicles respond to hauling weight. But the company will "fairly soon" move
goods for shippers - just about any type of freight, except for hazardous
materials, Ron said.
Otto currently has about two dozen drivers who are employees, and next year the
company will have more partnerships with independent drivers. Truck fleets will
also help test its technology.
Otto has had talks with potential partners and is in the process of trying to
cement deals with some of them, Ron said.
"This is all about putting it on the road," Ron said, "collecting the miles."
(Reporting by Heather Somerville and Julia Love; Editing by Jonathan Weber)
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