Uber drivers can rent a Tesla through Hertz starting on Nov. 1
in Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego and Washington DC, with
the program later this year expanding to cities nationwide, the
ride-hail company said in a blog post.
The Tesla rentals, consisting mostly of the electric vehicle
company's Model 3 sedan, will be available exclusively to Uber
drivers and start out at $334 a week, including insurance and
maintenance. Uber said the rental cost would drop to $299 per
week or lower as the program expands in the coming year.
Uber's announcement comes just days after Hertz on Monday said
it would order 100,000 Tesla vehicles by the end of 2022. News
of the biggest-ever Tesla order led to a share price rally and
saw the company's market value surpass $1 trillion.
Wednesday's deal represents Uber's most significant step so far
in expanding the use of EVs on its platform. The company has
vowed to operate only electric vehicles on its U.S., Canadian
and European platform by 2030, and worldwide by 2040.
But only few ride-hail drivers can afford the higher EV sticker
prices and in 2019, only 0.15% of all Uber miles in the U.S. and
Canada were driven in electric vehicles, company data showed.
Ride-hail drivers produce more pollution per passenger-mile
traveled because they spend more than a third of their time
driving around empty. Researchers generally assume that
electrifying one ride-hail vehicle reduces the same amount of
CO2 as converting three regular gas-powered vehicles.
Hertz, which is emerging from bankruptcy, hopes the EV focus
will allow the once-dominant brand to stand out against
competitors.
Carmakers also consider partnerships with ride-hail companies as
a convenient way to expose more consumers to non-fuel-powered
vehicles.
Tesla did not respond to a request for comment.
(Reporting by Tina Bellon in Austin, Texas; editing by Richard
Pullin)
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