“We
really invested the extra time and resources to build a vehicle
that doesn't require exemptions and then that basically lets us
control our own destiny and also deploy our vehicles at scale,”
Jesse Levison, Zoox’s co-founder and chief technology officer
told Reuters.
Zoox’s vehicle, called VH6, has room for four passengers, with
two facing each other - a layout that looks like startup
Cruise’s Origin vehicle unveiled in January, 2020. Cruise is
controlled by General Motors Co..
The VH6 is produced in Zoox’s "Kato" factory in Fremont,
California, a city where Tesla also builds its cars.
Levinson said the factory has produced dozens of VH6s and the
current location can produce tens of thousands of vehicles.
He said that the current economic slowdown has not affected the
company and Zoox will increase its employee number to 2,000 this
year from 1,400 at the start of the year. Levison also said for
now the company is focused on moving people, rather than
packages, which is much more lucrative.
“We can compete with, for example, Uber and Lyft and make money
and be very cost competitive even in the early days of this
technology,” he said.
Generally self-driving tech companies with vehicles without a
steering wheel or pedals have applied to the U.S. National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) for an
"exemption." Levinson said Zoox chose instead to self-certify
according to Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards,
acknowledging this was a higher bar that makes Zoox liable for
the safety of the vehicle.
The NHTSA exemption usually limits the number of vehicles that
can be manufactured as well as the period of production.
Cruise applied this year for a NHTSA exemption https://www.getcruise.com/news/seeking-nhtsa-review-of-the-origin.
A source close to the company said Cruise viewed that method as
more responsible and gives regulators a clearer view into the
technology.
Meanwhile Nuro, a self-driving startup backed by SoftBank, said
it anticipates its next generation vehicle to "comply with all
applicable federal standards at the time that it is deployed".
Its current R2 vehicle with no pedals, steering wheel and room
inside only for packages, were manufactured with an exemption
from NHTSA.
(Reporting By Jane Lanhee Lee; Editing by David Gregorio)
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