Uber partner Avride is under investigation for self-driving crashes
Key takeaways
- The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has opened an investigation into Avride, a robotaxi company that has partnered with Uber, after identifying more than a dozen crashes and one minor injury.
- All of the crashes have come while the Avride vehicles were under the supervision of a safety monitor in the driver s seat.
- Our total operations have continued to grow, while the frequency of incidents relative to our mileage has steadily declined.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has opened an investigation into Avride, a robotaxi company that has partnered with Uber, after identifying more than a dozen crashes and one minor injury.
The safety regulator s Office of Defects Investigation (ODI) said all 16 crashes that it has identified have to do with the competence of Avride s self-driving system, which has apparently struggled with changing lanes, responding to other vehicles in the same lane, and responding to stationary objects.
All of the crashes have come while the Avride vehicles were under the supervision of a safety monitor in the driver s seat. Reached for comment, Avride declined to explain why the safety monitors did not intervene in these crashes. The company pointed out that it reported these crashes to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) as required by the agency s 2021 Standing General Order on automated driving.