INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
A year ago, Lyft submitted a report to the California Department of Motor Vehicles that summed up its 2018 autonomous vehicle testing
activity in a single, short paragraph.
Lyft Inc
did not operate any vehicles in autonomous mode on California public roads during the reporting period,& the letter read
has no autonomous mode disengagements to report.
The 2019 data tells a different story
Lyft had 19 autonomous vehicles testing on public roads in California in 2019, according to data released earlier this week by the CA DMV
Those 19 vehicles, which operated during the reporting period of December 2018 to November 2019, drove nearly 43,000 miles in autonomous
mode.
The report is the latest sign that Lyft is trying to ramp up its self-driving vehicle program known as Level 5.
The CA DMV, the agency
that regulates autonomous vehicle testing on public roads in the state, requires companies to submit an annual report that includes data
such as total AV miles driven and number of vehicles
It also requires companies to report&disengagements,& a term that describes each time a self-driving vehicle disengages out of autonomous
mode either because its technology failed or a human safety driver took manual control for safety reasons.
That still far below established
AV developers such as Cruise and Waymo, which accumulated 831,000 and 1.45 million autonomous miles, respectively
And it makes up just a tiny sliver of the total autonomous miles racked up by the 36 companies that tested on public roads in 2019.
The
total number of autonomous miles driven in 2019 rose 40%, to more than 2.87 million, thanks largely to a notable uptick in public on-road
testing by Baidu, Cruise, Pony.ai, Waymo and Zoox
While the number of companies with testing permits grew to 60 in 2019, the percentage of companies actually testing on public roads fell to
In 2018, about 62% of the 48 companies that held permits tested on public roads.
Other companies scaled back public testing in California
Some moved public testing outside of California, others retracted due to the high cost
Others said they were opting to place greater emphasis on simulation.
Still, the report shows Lyft is doing more than partnering with
autonomous vehicle companies like Aptiv
Lyft and Aptiv launched a robotaxi pilot in January 2018 in Las Vegas
The program, which puts Aptiv vehicles on Lyft ride-hailing network, surpassed 100,000 rides this month
Human safety drivers are always behind the wheel and the vehicles do not drive autonomously in parking lots and hotel lobby areas.
Lyft
Level 5 program — a nod to the SAE automated driving level that means the vehicle handles all driving in all conditions — was launched
Today, Level 5 employs more than 400 people in the United States , Munich and London.
Testing on public roads in California began in
November 2018 with a pilot program in Palo Alto that provided rides to Lyft employees in Palo Alto
The pilot provided on-demand rides set on fixed routes, such as traveling between the Lyft office and Caltrain.
Since then, the company has
expanded the scope and geography of the pilot
By late 2019, Lyft was driving four times more autonomous miles per quarter than it was six months prior.
Lyft is also testing on a
dedicated closed-course track in East Palo Alto that it opened in November 2019
The company told TechCrunch it uses this facility, which can be changed to include intersections, traffic lights and merges, to test
software prior to putting its vehicles on public roads.