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Autonomous Vehicles Weekly

Autonomous Vehicles Weekly — 2026-04-17

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Autonomous Vehicles Weekly — 2026-04-17

Autonomous Vehicles Weekly|April 17, 2026(4d ago)7 min read8.4AI quality score — automatically evaluated based on accuracy, depth, and source quality
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Waymo expanded its robotaxi footprint this week with a full public launch in Miami and ongoing driverless testing in London, while Uber made headlines with a confirmed $10 billion-plus commitment to autonomous vehicles — a dramatic strategy shift from its asset-light roots. A new consumer poll meanwhile underscores the industry's persistent challenge: most people still don't want to ride in a robotaxi.

Autonomous Vehicles Weekly — 2026-04-17


Top Stories


Uber Commits Over $10 Billion to Autonomous Vehicles in Major Strategy Shift

  • What happened: Uber announced on April 15 that it has committed more than $10 billion to acquiring autonomous vehicles and taking equity stakes in AV developers, fundamentally abandoning its traditional asset-light, gig-economy business model. The company is acquiring thousands of AVs and aiming to launch robotaxi services in up to 28 cities by 2028.
  • Why it matters: This is one of the largest single capital commitments to AV deployment by any company outside of dedicated AV developers. It signals that the world's largest ride-hailing platform sees autonomous vehicles not as a distant threat to hedge against, but as the core of its future business. Lucid Motors is supplying 35,000 EVs for the effort, with Nvidia-powered systems powering the fleets.
  • Key players: Uber Technologies, Lucid Motors, Nvidia, Volkswagen/MOIA (LA launch partner)

Reuters photo showing Uber's autonomous vehicle fleet commitment announcement
Reuters photo showing Uber's autonomous vehicle fleet commitment announcement


Waymo Opens Miami to All Riders — Full Public Launch

  • What happened: Waymo opened its fully driverless robotaxi service to all members of the public in Miami, removing the prior waitlist that had limited access to over 10,000 early users since January 2026.
  • Why it matters: Miami represents Waymo's most aggressive public-access rollout to date. Moving from a restricted user base to fully open access is a critical commercial milestone, and Miami's dense, complex traffic environment is a significant proving ground compared to earlier deployments in Phoenix and San Francisco.
  • Key players: Waymo (Alphabet subsidiary)

Waymo robotaxi vehicle in Miami available for public rides
Waymo robotaxi vehicle in Miami available for public rides

nbcmiami.com

nbcmiami.com


Most Americans Still Skeptical of Robotaxis, New Poll Finds

  • What happened: A new EV Intelligence poll reported by The Verge (published April 16) found that the majority of people remain deeply skeptical about self-driving cars and robotaxis. The survey found that even promises of improved safety or cost savings do little to shift public opinion.
  • Why it matters: Despite rapid fleet expansions by Waymo and massive capital commitments by Uber, public trust remains the industry's Achilles heel. The data highlights a significant gap between industry momentum and consumer readiness — a challenge that could slow commercial scale-up even as operational fleets grow.
  • Key players: EV Intelligence (pollster), broader AV industry

Illustration representing autonomous vehicle public trust survey data
Illustration representing autonomous vehicle public trust survey data

theverge.com

theverge.com


Self-Driving Cars & Robotaxis

  • Waymo (London): Waymo's fully driverless robotaxi vehicles are now operating on London streets, marking the company's first testing presence in the UK. Sky News confirmed the AI-controlled vehicles are driving themselves around London, though a human remains available in the vehicle as required under current UK regulations. A commercial service would follow pending UK government approval.

Waymo robotaxi vehicle on London streets during autonomous testing
Waymo robotaxi vehicle on London streets during autonomous testing

  • Waymo (Nashville): Shortly after the official Nashville service launch, videos circulated showing Waymo vehicles displaying unusual behavior on city streets. Nashville metro police were involved in at least some of the incidents. The malfunctions attracted significant local media attention in the days following launch.

Still from Nashville video footage showing Waymo vehicle behaving unexpectedly
Still from Nashville video footage showing Waymo vehicle behaving unexpectedly

  • Tesla, Waymo & Uber: Axios framed this week's industry developments around a new "Big Three" in mobility emerging — Tesla, Waymo, and Uber — as the race toward full autonomy reshapes which companies are likely to dominate urban transportation over the next decade.

  • Self-driving talent wars: TechCrunch's Mobility newsletter (April 12) reported on a growing wave of talent poaching across the self-driving vehicle sector, as well-funded AV programs compete aggressively for engineers and researchers from rivals, academia, and adjacent AI fields.

axios.com

Mobility


Drones & Urban Air Mobility

  • AIR (heavy-lift cargo eVTOL): AIR successfully completed the first flight of its heavy-lift cargo eVTOL drone carrying a 550 lb payload — one of the largest demonstrated payloads in its class globally. The milestone, reported April 15, positions AIR as a serious contender in the autonomous freight-drone segment as demand for last-mile and cross-regional cargo solutions grows.

AIR heavy-lift cargo eVTOL drone during its first flight with 550 lb payload
AIR heavy-lift cargo eVTOL drone during its first flight with 550 lb payload

  • Urban Air Mobility (UAM) sector outlook: The Jerusalem Post published an opinion piece (April 12) examining the hard infrastructure and regulatory questions that must be answered before urban air mobility becomes viable at scale, noting that every unresolved technical challenge in UAM has a direct parallel in defense applications — underscoring the dual-use significance of the sector's progress.
axios.com

Mobility

electrek.co

electrek.co


Regulation & Policy

  • United Kingdom (CAM Pathfinder Programme): The UK government this week accelerated autonomous vehicle development by directing funding to projects exploring how AVs could benefit businesses and communities across the country. The grants are part of the £150 million Connected and Automated Mobility (CAM) Pathfinder programme. Eight feasibility studies received backing in this latest round.

  • UK Government / Waymo (London testing framework): Waymo's London testing push is proceeding under a framework requiring a human in the vehicle while awaiting formal government approval for a commercial driverless service. The Register confirmed that UK regulators have not yet approved fully driverless commercial operations, making the current phase a supervised testing program only.

axios.com

Mobility


Business & Investment

  • Uber ($10B+ AV commitment): Uber's $10 billion-plus autonomous vehicle commitment — confirmed by Reuters on April 15 citing the Financial Times — includes purchasing thousands of autonomous vehicles outright and taking equity stakes in AV developers. The company aims to position itself as the primary distribution platform for autonomous ride-hailing rather than a builder of AV technology itself.

  • GCC autonomous vehicle market: A new consultancy report published April 15 projected the global fully autonomous vehicle market could reach $182 billion by 2035, with Gulf Cooperation Council countries positioned to capture a $19 billion share. The analysis points to the GCC's infrastructure investment plans and regulatory appetite as key enablers for early AV adoption in the region.


Technology & Innovation

  • Waymo in London (sensor and AI challenge): The Register's coverage of Waymo's London deployment highlights the technical complexity of operating AV systems tuned for US roads in a UK environment — including left-hand traffic, narrower lanes, and different road-marking conventions. The deployment is being watched closely as a test of how transferable current-generation AV sensor stacks and AI models are across international geographies.

  • AIR heavy-lift eVTOL (propulsion and load systems): AIR's 550 lb payload flight demonstrates a significant advance in eVTOL propulsion and structural engineering. Industry observers note that cracking the heavy-lift cargo threshold is a prerequisite for commercial drone freight economics to work — the milestone suggests the sector is advancing beyond light-package delivery toward genuine freight applications.


What to Watch Next Week

  • Waymo Nashville fallout: Whether Nashville city officials or Tennessee regulators respond formally to the post-launch vehicle behavior incidents — and whether Waymo issues any operational adjustments to its Nashville deployment.
  • Uber AV strategy details: Expect further disclosures about which AV developers Uber has taken equity stakes in, and whether any formal fleet purchase agreements beyond the Lucid deal are announced.
  • UK AV regulatory progress: Watch for signals from the UK Department for Transport on timeline and conditions for approving fully driverless commercial operations — Waymo's London presence is creating political pressure for clarity.
  • Volkswagen/MOIA Los Angeles testing: Monitor whether MOIA America and Uber advance toward a firm launch date for their late-2026 LA robotaxi service following their recent on-road testing announcement.

Reader Action Items

  • For industry professionals: The Nashville incidents and London human-in-vehicle requirement both underscore that geographic expansion creates new operational edge cases — teams should audit how their safety protocols and remote monitoring scale across diverse urban environments.
  • For investors: Uber's $10 billion commitment is the clearest signal yet that ride-hailing incumbents are treating AV disruption as existential — evaluate how this repositions Uber's balance sheet risk versus the strategic upside of locking in AV distribution partnerships before the technology matures.

This content was collected, curated, and summarized entirely by AI — including how and what to gather. It may contain inaccuracies. Crew does not guarantee the accuracy of any information presented here. Always verify facts on your own before acting on them. Crew assumes no legal liability for any consequences arising from reliance on this content.

Explore related topics
  • QHow will this impact Uber driver income?
  • QWhich 28 cities will get the robotaxis?
  • QWhy is public skepticism so persistent?
  • QHow safe are robotaxis in heavy rain?

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