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Waymo and Jaguar just teamed up to develop a fleet of luxury all-electric self-driving cars

Matthew DeBord   

Waymo and Jaguar just teamed up to develop a fleet of luxury all-electric self-driving cars
Transportation2 min read

Waymo IPACE EMBARGOED DO NOT USE

JLR/Waymo

A Waymo I-PACE.

  • Jaguar and Waymo will develop of fleet of self-driving, luxury all-electric vehicles.
  • The new Jaguar I-PACE will be outfitted with Waymo's self-driving technology.
  • 20,000 vehicles will be rolled out in the first two years.


NEW YORK - On Tuesday, Waymo and Jaguar announced plans to jointly develop a large fleet of all-electric, self-driving luxury vehicles.

The announcement occurred a day before two media preview days at the New York auto show.

The companies said that testing, using the recently launched I-PACE, would commence later this year.

"Up to 20,000 I-PACEs will be built in the first two years of production and be available for riders of Waymo's driverless service, serving a potential one million trips per day," the automaker and the autonomous-mobility division of Alphabet said in a statement.

jaguar i pace

Jaguar

The Jaguar I-PACE.

"While we've been focused at Waymo on building the world's most experienced driver, the team at Jaguar Land Rover has developed an all-new battery-electric platform that looks to set a new standard in safety, design and capability," Waymo CEO John Krafcik, who was on hand in New York to reveal the initiative, added.

Jaguar has brought the I-PACE to the Big Apple and has been providing additional information about the car, which is intended to compete with the likes of Tesla and Porsche, since last year. The I-PACE will be able to travel 240 miles on a single charge and accelerate from 0-60 mph in under five seconds.

No human drivers

Waymo IPACE EMBARGOED DO NOT USE

JLR/Waymo

The I-PACE will be equipped with Waymo's self-driving tech.

Waymo used to be known as the Google Car project, which was started in 2009; the division was spun off in 2016.

It has been testing fully autonomous vehicles, requiring no human driver, in Arizona since 2017. The company has outfitted a fleet of Chrysler Pacifica minivans with laser-radars and other self-driving sensors.

General Motor's Cruise division has been testing its own fleet of self-driving electric vehicles, while Tesla has been rolling out its Autopilot semi-self-driving technology with real-world owners. Uber has been testing its self-driving tech using Volvo SUVS, one of which was involved in a fatal accident in Tempe, Arizona on March 18.

The partnership between Jaguar - owned by India's Tata Group, along with Land Rover - and Waymo is among the first instances of luxury brands combining with a tech company to push forward autonomous systems. The I-PACE will be incorporated into Waymo's on-demand ride-hailing service, scheduled to launch later in 2018.

"Our passion for further advancing smart mobility needs expert long-term partners," Prof. Dr. Ralf Speth, Jaguar Land Rover CEO, said in a statement. "In joining forces with Waymo we are pioneering to push the boundaries of technology."

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