Audio By Carbonatix
People in Phoenix, Arizona will soon be able to order a driverless taxi, as Google expands its Waymo service.
Vehicles with no human driver on board were previously tested by a select group of Waymo customers, before the pandemic halted the service.
The driver-free cars will initially be available only to friends and family of those early Waymo adopters, but will extend to all app users within weeks.
The service comes two years later than originally promised.
The cars will be remotely monitored, with vehicle operators intervening in extreme circumstances - such as a road ahead being closed.
According to Ars Technica, cars will initially only cover a 50 sq mile (130 sq km) area in the Phoenix suburbs of Chandler, Tempe and Mesa. The company has yet to provide details on exactly how many people would be given access to the app that will allow them to hail the driverless taxis.
The firm said: "We expect our new driverless service to be very popular, and we're thankful to our riders for their patience as we ramp up availability to serve demand."
Waymo has around 600 cars in its fleet, but it did not say how many of these would operate in the new service.
Before the pandemic, driver-free vehicles provided 5-10% of rides (out of 1,000-2,000 rides per week) in the designated zone around Phoenix.
Later this year, the firm hopes to reintroduce rides with in-car vehicle operators, with barriers between the front and rear passenger seat, to ensure they are Covid-safe.
The additional vehicles will "add capacity and allow us to serve a large geographical area", the company said.
Chris Jones, an automotive analyst at research firm Canalys, said Waymo was currently the clear leader in driverless technology, and now had to persuade people to get in a car without a human driver.
Coronavirus may prove an incentive.
"We have seen concerns about getting into a shared vehicle because of the pandemic - and Uber's bookings, for example, have dropped significantly," Mr Jones explained.
"People are familiar with Waymo - they have been testing in Phoenix for many years. Trust will be important as people ask, for example: would I put my daughter in a Waymo to take her to school?"
The next stage for the firm will be expanding its services to other cities around the US, he added. Waymo is currently running tests in around 25 locations.
Latest Stories
-
Trump’s White House ballroom loses federal funding proposed by Senate Republicans
35 seconds -
New BBC boss warns that ‘tough choices are unavoidable’
2 minutes -
Trump-backed challenger defeats Republican senator who voted to convict president
3 minutes -
Tributes flow after Australian shark attack victim named as father-of-two
3 minutes -
‘Everest Man’ and ‘Mountain Queen’ break own records scaling world’s tallest peak
4 minutes -
Thousands of New York commuters braced for Monday morning chaos due to rail strike
5 minutes -
HS2 failings blamed on high-speed focus and political pressure
6 minutes -
Instant AI answers can trivialise human intelligence, warns Royal Observatory
7 minutes -
Driver of crashed train tested positive for drugs, Thai police say
7 minutes -
Video: President Mahama delivers keynote address at 79th World Health Assembly
46 minutes -
Escaped tiger shot by German police after attacking man
48 minutes -
Ghana hosts GAYO-DYEC 2026 as youth innovators drive Africa’s green transition
51 minutes -
You can reverse much of the damage alcohol has done to your body, science says
53 minutes -
Ministry of Communications, Digital Technology and Innovations denies claims of fund misuse
57 minutes -
At least six Americans exposed to Ebola during DR Congo outbreak
57 minutes