
Waymo expands coverage in Austin, Texas, as robotaxi competition heats up
(Reuters) -Alphabet's Waymo is expanding its service in Austin, Texas, to 90 square miles from 37 square miles earlier, the software giant's self-driving unit said on Thursday, seeking to protect its top position in the city from rivals such as Tesla.
Waymo, which has over 100 vehicles on the Uber platform in Austin, will now cover new neighborhoods such as Crestview, Windsor Park, Sunset Valley and Franklin Park, the company said.
After cautiously expanding its self-driving taxi services across the U.S. for years, Waymo is now largely seen as the frontrunner in the space. It has about 1,500 vehicles across San Francisco and other Bay Area cities, Los Angeles, Phoenix, Atlanta and others.
Rival Tesla is looking to catch up, having conducted a small trial last month of about a dozen of its Model Y SUVs in a limited area of Austin.
But Tesla still faces a steep challenge to commercialize this technology on a large scale and clear regulatory hurdles.
The automaker also does not use sensors such as radar and lidar like Waymo and most rivals; instead, it depends solely on cameras and artificial intelligence.
"Austin remains one of the fastest growing cities in the country, and we are doing our part to grow with it," Shweta Shrivastava, the senior director of product management at Waymo, said.
Earlier this week, Waymo's vehicles logged a milestone of 100 million miles driven without a human behind the wheel, doubling its mileage in about six months.
(Reporting by Zaheer Kachwala in Bengaluru; Editing by Sahal Muhammed)

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