IHS Markit identifies 5 billion barrels of oil equivalent in short-cycle opportunities outside North America
Nikola Motor to manufacture hydrogen-electric semi in Arizona

udelv makes first public road test delivery from autonomous electric last-mile delivery vehicle

udelv, a Burlingame, Calif. company, unveiled its autonomous, electric, last-mile delivery vehicle and made the first public road test deliveries from Draeger’s Market in San Mateo to two nearby customers. The deliver route was a 2.5-mile loop with traffic lights, lane changes, unsignalized left turns and two delivery stops. In compliance with existing California regulations, the vehicle was supervised by a safety driver and in test mode.

The distinctive orange customized vehicle is built on a fully electric powertrain and features 18 secure cargo compartments with automatic doors using a cloud-based proprietary technology that is shared between the vehicle, customers and merchants. In its current configuration, the vehicle can drive for up to 60 miles (97 km) per cycle and can load up to 700 pounds (317.5 kg) of cargo.

UdelveTruck

A dedicated application is available on iOS to track and potentially reschedule deliveries, with an Android version to be released soon.

To complement its autonomous driving technology and ensure reliability of the service, udelv also created an ultra-low latency teleoperations system to monitor and control the vehicles remotely and allow for overrides and human-assisted guidance in unique situations.

udelv anticipates that its new vehicle will enable a drop in the cost of local deliveries, add delivery window flexibility and significantly reduce carbon footprint.

Deliveries are the perfect first application for autonomous vehicles. Customers simply open the locker with a press of a button on their mobile device and the vehicle heads on its way to the next delivery or back to the store.

—Daniel Laury, CEO of udelv

The company, with several technology patents pending, is planning to test dozens of udelv vehicles on the roads in a few states within a short timeframe.

udelv is planning to use a subscription business model to roll out its vehicle fleet.

Led by Laury and CTO Akshat Patel, former Tesla and Apple special projects engineer manager, udelv is listed on the California DMV Autonomous Vehicle Tester Program under the name of CarOne LLC. The company is funded by a group of investors that includes prominent US and international venture capital funds as well as private investors.

Comments

sd

It is described as being distinctive but the term ugly comes to my mind as in it is so ugly as to be safe as everyone will avoid it.

Paroway

I don't find it ugly at all, just distinctive.

The comments to this entry are closed.