Uber has jumped back into self‑driving in dramatic fashion, pledging a $300 million equity investment in luxury EV maker Lucid and a separate, “multi‑hundred‑million‑dollar” stake in autonomous‑vehicle pioneer Nuro, then committing to buy at least 20,000 Lucid Gravity SUVs that will roll out as premium robotaxis beginning in a single U.S. city late 2026. The six‑year agreement gives Uber ownership or control of the vehicles, equips each one at Lucid’s Arizona plant with Nuro’s Level‑4 “Nuro Driver” sensor stack, and makes the cars available exclusively through the Uber app.
For Uber, the deal marks a full‑throttle return to autonomy after its 2020 divestiture of the Advanced Technologies Group to Aurora. CEO Dara Khosrowshahi told analysts the company is finished “dabbling” and now aims to operate one of the world’s largest autonomous fleets without taking on the time and risk of building hardware itself. The move squares with Uber’s deepening collaborations with Waymo and Baidu but goes further: this time Uber will own the cars, collect the fares and keep a bigger share of the economics. Lucid, still burning cash as it scales the Gravity, gains a guaranteed customer whose purchase order is double last year’s entire Air‑sedan output, while the upfront investment shores up its balance sheet and sent the stock soaring more than 25 percent in Thursday trading.
Nuro, long known for delivery pods, secures its first major licensing deal for passenger autonomy and immediate access to Uber’s global rider base. Under the plan, a prototype Gravity robotaxi is already running laps at Nuro’s Las Vegas proving ground; production units will ship with roof‑mounted LiDAR, radar and camera arrays calibrated for dense urban traffic, and Uber says ride prices will be “mid‑tier between Comfort and Black,” positioning the service as a luxury alternative to standard UberX.
Analysts call the three‑way partnership a direct challenge to Waymo’s and Cruise’s expansion pushes and a hedge against Tesla’s promise of an all‑Tesla robo‑network. The 20,000‑vehicle commitment dwarfs Waymo’s current public fleet and, if fully deployed, would require roughly five gigawatt‑hours of battery capacity—good news for Lucid’s AMP‑1 factory and its cell suppliers. Regulatory approvals remain the wild card: Uber declined to name its launch city but is expected to target Phoenix, Dallas or Miami, jurisdictions already familiar with Nuro’s delivery robots and friendly to AV pilots.
The companies project that once the first city is proven, additional markets will come online every few months, aided by Uber’s existing rider density and data on peak‑demand corridors. Executives say the fleet could eventually expand “well beyond” 20,000 vehicles worldwide, giving Uber a premium robotaxi footprint that complements its conventional and Waymo‑powered offerings—an aggressive play to ensure the company is not left on the sidelines of an autonomous future it once helped imagine. For Lucid and Nuro, the partnership locks in volume, validates their technology and throws down a gauntlet in an industry where scale, speed and deep pockets are likely to decide the winners.
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