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Chinese autonomous vehicle start-up Pony.ai has launched a self-driving delivery service in Irvine, California. Photo: Handout

China’s Pony.ai rolls out US self-driving delivery service for groceries amid coronavirus lockdown

  • Founded in 2016 by two former senior Google engineers, Pony.ai was valued at over US$3 billion after a funding round led by Toyota in February

Chinese autonomous vehicle start-up Pony.ai has launched a self-driving delivery service in Irvine, California, to help fulfil increasing online grocery orders during the coronavirus lockdown.

The service, launched in partnership with Los Angeles-based e-commerce platform Yamibuy, enables residents in the area to receive their purchases of daily necessities at home in an “contactless” way, the company announced on Friday.

With an initial fleet of 10 autonomous vehicles, each is expected to load 10 to 20 packages per trip and deliver around 100 a day. Still, the operation is not completely without a human touch – a safety operator is needed on all trips, also serving as a delivery person to place the package at the customer’s doorstep.

The move follows the ride-hailing program Pony.ai has operated in Irvine since November, which was the first of its kind in California. The service, introduced together with South Korean carmaker Hyundai Motor Group, allows commuters to hail an on-demand autonomous ride or take a shared carpool with multiple commuters via an app.

Founded in 2016 by two former senior Google engineers, the company was valued at over US$3 billion after a funding round led by Japanese carmaker Toyota in February. The start-up counts Sequoia Capital and Fidelity International among its backers.

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With robotaxi operations in both China and the US, Pony.ai is among a number of autonomous driving start-ups that have taken off in China, competing locally with bigger rivals like Baidu and internationally with Google, whose self-driving unit Waymo is an industry leader.

The holy grail for these companies is to reach Level 5 in autonomous driving – where an autonomous car can perform driving tasks in all environmental and road conditions as well as or better than a human driver.

Still, commercialisation is a major challenge for the companies as they need to make the technology truly reliable. Chinese companies including TuSimple and AutoX have run pilot self-driving delivery services in the US over the past two years.

The tie-up with Yamibuy for autonomous deliveries is a “milestone in its commercialisation progress” and opens new possibilities for the logistics industry in future, Pony.ai said in its statement.

The service is expected to offer communities in Irvine a “safer and more convenient” option and help curb the spread of the coronavirus, it added.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Pony.ai starts self-driving food deliveries in California
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