Lyft CEO: Self-Driving Cars To Handle Majority Of Lyft Rides Within Only 5 Years

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While Uber’s recent announcement of a self-driving pilot program in Pittsburgh, along with comments made by its CEO, has made it very clear that the company is aiming to transition to a largely driverless business plan, things have been somewhat quieter on the Lyft front.

john-zimmer-lyftThat’s changed now, though, following comments made in a very open manifesto that Lyft CEO and co-founder John Zimmer recently posted. Zimmer apparently expects self-driving cars to handle the majority of Lyft’s rides within only 5 years, and all of them within only 10 years. That means, going by Zimmer’s vision, by 2026, anytime you used Lyft to make a trip, you would be doing so in a self-driving car.

Interestingly, Zimmer also “expects” that private car ownership will “all but end” in most major US cities by 2025. While I’m not completely skeptical of Zimmer’s self-driving car predictions themselves, this last point seems more like wishful thinking to me.

Engadget provides more: “Zimmer doesn’t say exactly how his company will reach that milestone so quickly, but he sees a transition where driverless tech gradually increases in capability. Fixed-route autonomy would show up as early as 2017, while low-speed (under 25 MPH) autonomy on changeable routes would start as soon as 2018. Full autonomy would just be the next logical step, then.”

lyft

Continuing: “The 2021 target may be difficult to hit. Numerous automakers only expect to start shipping their first self-driving cars that year, let alone put them into service in fleets. There’s also the not-so-small matter of regulation. For Lyft to fulfill its dreams, many of the 36 states it operates in would have to legalize autonomy. Given that the country is only taking tentative steps toward legalization at the moment, there’s no guarantee the needed legal framework will be in place. And assuming it is, will self-driving cars be sufficiently widespread that city dwellers could safely ditch their cars just 4 years later?”

Given the amount of money that stands to be made by some companies, though, I’m expecting that the lobbying effort is pretty substantial already, and will grow even more in the coming years. I’d be surprised if regulations end up being the holdup (if there is one), rather than other issues. A high-profile fatal accident could change things, of course.


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James Ayre

James Ayre's background is predominantly in geopolitics and history, but he has an obsessive interest in pretty much everything. After an early life spent in the Imperial Free City of Dortmund, James followed the river Ruhr to Cofbuokheim, where he attended the University of Astnide. And where he also briefly considered entering the coal mining business. He currently writes for a living, on a broad variety of subjects, ranging from science, to politics, to military history, to renewable energy.

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