Argo takes different road to skirt self-driving
challenges
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[December 11, 2019] By
Paul Lienert and Ben Klayman
PITTSBURGH/
DETROIT (Reuters) - Sky's the
limit optimism about self-driving cars is giving way to tougher
questions about how expensive automotive artificial intelligence will
ever make a profit.
Those are questions the founders of Argo AI - and automaker partners
Ford Motor Co and Volkswagen AG <VOWG_p.DE> - are betting they can
answer by taking a different road than more highly valued rivals. They
are steering away from building a robotaxi fleet and focusing instead on
getting paid by the mile by customers that will use robot vehicles for
multiple purposes, including delivering goods or transporting groups of
people in vans.
The self-driving systems developer led by Bryan Salesky, who got his
start developing automated vehicles for a Defense Department sponsored
competition 12 years ago, is at the center of a multibillion-dollar bet
by its auto giant partners that autonomous vehicle technology must be
good for more than replacing taxi drivers.
"I hate the word robotaxi," Salesky said in a rare interview at Argo's
Pittsburgh headquarters. "There are so many applications and businesses
to be built, and (try to) understand which ones are more profitable than
others."
The Argo business plan hinges on a unique revenue-sharing deal that will
pay Argo fees based on miles traveled in self-driving Ford and VW
vehicles equipped with Argo's technology. Details of that arrangement
have not previously been reported.
Argo's financial structure is also different from rival autonomous
vehicle ventures. Ford and VW each own just under 40%, with Argo's
management team holding just over 20%, according to sources familiar
with the business. Details of the ownership structure also have not
previously been reported.
Among the prospective commercial applications of Argo's technology:
Long-haul trucking, e-commerce deliveries, the transport of people along
fixed routes in cities, and off-highway applications such as mining.
Founded in Pittsburgh in late 2016 by Michigan natives Salesky and Chief
Operating Officer Peter Rander, Argo is headquartered in a nondescript
building in The Strip, an old warehouse and market district overlooking
the Allegheny River.
Argo's main rivals focused initially on deploying robotaxis. Waymo,
however, is now working on adapting its automated "driver" to commercial
vehicles, including Class 8 trucks, Waymo Chief Executive John Krafcik
said.
Argo's plan is to provide automated driving systems that Ford will
launch in late 2021 in three U.S. cities, likely using a compact shuttle
based on the redesigned Ford Transit Connect.
VW executives revealed to Reuters they expect to follow in 2022 or 2023
with a VW-designed all-electric vehicle, which could be deployed
initially in the German automaker's Moia ride services business.
Ford executive Jim Farley said at a Detroit conference in November the
No. 2 U.S. automaker was exploring applications for Argo's technology
"that could make more sense than robotaxis," including automated
materials deliveries to trades people via a subscription service.
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An Argo Ai self driving prototype vehicle is seen outside a Ford and
Volkswagen joint news conference in New York City, New York, U.S.,
July 12, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo
In addition to deploying Argo-outfitted vehicles in its own ride services fleet,
VW has received interest from other ride hailing and transportation companies in
buying VW vehicles equipped with Argo's system, said Thomas Sedran, head of VW
Commercial Vehicles and the automaker's autonomous vehicles initiative.
That could be another way for Argo and its partners to make money as the
technology finds its way into more vehicles and the number of miles traveled
multiplies.
"The details, the concrete conditions, how many cents per mile are we talking
about or what's the share of revenue? That's still open," Sedran said. "At this
stage, we are still working on making that technology generate revenue."
Salesky said Argo's self-driving technology can be adapted to a variety of
vehicle types, sizes and applications: "This is going to be a multi-stage thing
where there are going to be a number of different platforms and potentially
different businesses."
Some rivals are not convinced Argo has any advantage.
"We didn't start from scratch," said Glen De Vos, chief technology officer of
Aptiv, which has bolstered its own expertise through acquisitions of
self-driving startups nuTonomy and Ottomatika.
De Vos pointed to Aptiv's partnership with Lyft in testing self-driving vehicles
in the latter's Las Vegas ride hailing network, and said Argo "doesn't have the
component engineering capability that Aptiv has."
Investors so far have assigned Argo a lower valuation than robotaxi-focussed
rivals. Waymo is valued at $105 billion, while Cruise had a valuation of $19
billion at its last funding round.
Argo's valuation is estimated at $7.25 billion following Volkswagen's $1.9
billion investment, matching the $7.25 billion valuation of Uber Technologies'
Advanced Technologies Group, the ride services company's self-driving unit.
Salesky said he and Rander are open to bringing other investor-partners into the
business: "The more diversity, the better — but it needs to complement the
portfolio that we're already building with Ford and VW."
"But we know that this is really the early days," he added. "The ballgame hasn't
really started."
(Reporting by Paul Lienert and Ben Klayman in Detroit; Editing by Tom Brown)
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