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GM’s Cruise to resume robotaxi testing in Silicon Valley this fall

By David Welch | Bloomberg
Cruise, the self-driving vehicle unit of General Motors Co., plans to resume driving robotaxis in California this fall for the first time since a pedestrian accident led to its license being suspended in October.
The testing is small scale, with at most five vehicles being run with test drivers at the wheel to do development work. Cruise said Thursday that it will operate the cars in Sunnyvale and Mountain View. It won’t drive in San Francisco, where the company tussled with regulators.
It has taken Cruise almost a year to put cars back on the road in California following last year’s crisis, after one of the company’s cars struck and dragged a pedestrian. Its vehicles also had problems with emergency responders and human drivers in the city.
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At one point, GM Chief Executive Officer Mary Barra hoped Cruise would charge $1 billion in fares next year and generate $50 billion in new revenue for the automaker by 2030. But the October accident and fallout has been a huge setback for a technology that the company has called a “moonshot.”
GM has throttled back spending on Cruise by cutting staff and reining in plans to expand paid service across the US, but the automaker remains committed. GM funded Cruise with $850 million in cash in June and plans to raise money by the first quarter of 2025.
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
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