VW teams with car-parts maker to boost self-driving

 

Bloomberg

Volkswagen AG is partnering with Robert Bosch GmbH to bolster its automated-driving push and catch up with the
likes of Tesla Inc. on software development.
VW’s Cariad software unit will work with the world’s largest auto-parts supplier to introduce features allowing drivers to temporarily take their hands off the steering wheel starting in 2023, the companies said on Tuesday. At peak times, the effort will involve more than 1,000 workers from both firms.
The pact unites two industry giants in the development of automated driving, a technology that could reshape the transport sector but is enormously complex and costly. It’s a boon to Germany’s efforts to catch up in a field Europe’s largest economy has identified as crucial for growth.
There’s ample competition. Daimler AG’s Mercedes-Benz last year won regulatory backing to deploy hands-free driving in Germany with a system approved for Level 3 automated driving — a notch higher than Tesla’s Level 2 Autopilot system. Intel Corp’s Mobileye and Alphabet Inc.’s Waymo as well as Baidu in China are also working on autonomous technology.
The VW-Bosch project involves using sensors and artificial intelligence tech to collect and analyse real-time traffic data for use in the software-development process. The goal is to introduce Level 2 and Level 3 systems for hands-free driving in urban environments and on freeways. The firms said they’re also examining joint targets and timelines for Level 4 full self-driving.
“The cooperation between Bosch and Volkswagen is an important step to tap into the new revenue pool software,” VW Chief Financial Officer Arno Antlitz said. “The components of developed software can also be used for vehicles and ecosystems of other automakers in the future.”
VW last month earmarked 89 billion euros ($101 billion) for EV and software development over the next half decade and in 2020 invested $2.6 billion in Argo AI, a Pittsburgh-based autonomous-driving startup backed also by Ford Motor Co.
Executives including BMW AG CEO Oliver Zipse have recently said they’re open to more cooperation to share expenses on basic software frameworks as they don’t differ much from brand to brand. Still, the industry has a patchy track record of working together. Daimler and BMW announced a partnership in 2019 on what they referred to as “long-term cooperation” on automated-driving tech, only to part ways less than a year later.

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