Uber is publicly trashing its robotaxi partner Waymo while simultaneously investing more than $10 billion to build its own autonomous vehicle fleet with Rivian, Lucid, and Nuro. The ride-hailing giant’s executives have spent the last few months taking direct shots at Waymo’s technology and deployment strategy — even as Waymo vehicles still operate on Uber’s platform in Austin and Atlanta. Uber execs go after Waymo According to a new Business Insider report, Uber executives have been painting AV-only operators like Alphabet’s Waymo as “less scalable” and “less reliable” than Uber’s hybrid approach, which mixes human drivers with robotaxis on a single ride-hailing platform. The attacks haven’t been subtle. Uber CTO Praveen Neppalli shared a video on X in April showing what he described as a “scary” encounter with a Waymo vehicle in San Francisco. The Waymo appeared to overtake a Muni bus in the wrong lane, squeezing between the bus and Neppalli’s car. He wrote: “Big fan of AVs, but perception ≠ judgment. Edge cases matter!” Advertisement - scroll for more content CEO Dara Khosrowshahi has also been distancing Uber from the AV-only model. In February, he acknowledged that autonomous vehicles hold “enormous potential” but added that they are “far from capable of meeting the level of reliability” customers expect. Uber also released a white paper last week through Axios, arguing that robotaxis are currently deploying in wealthy neighborhoods while failing to serve cities like Oakland, where Waymo already has regulatory permission. Uber is calling for “equitable distribution” across markets — a barely veiled critique of Waymo’s expansion strategy. As far as we know, Waymo is actively trying to expand throughout the entire Bay Area, including Oakland, and it is trying to secure all regulatory approval. $10 billion to own the fleet While Uber publicly undermines Waymo, which is still a partner, the company is spending aggressively to build its own robotaxi infrastructure with alternative partners. The numbers are staggering. Uber has committed more than $10 billion total to autonomous vehicles, including roughly $2.5 billion in direct equity investments and $7.5 billion in vehicle purchase commitments. The key deals include: Uber now owns 11.5% of Lucid after investing $500 million, with a commitment to purchase at least 35,000 Lucid Gravity SUVs — up 75% from the original 20,000-vehicle deal. These vehicles will be equipped with Nuro’s Level 4 autonomous driving system. Uber invested up to $1.25 billion in Rivian to deploy up to 50,000 autonomous R2 robotaxis, with the first 10,000 expected in San Francisco and Miami starting in 2028. Nuro just secured a California driverless permit to test Lucid Gravity SUVs without a safety driver — a critical milestone before Uber’s planned commercial robotaxi launch in San Francisco later this year. Uber is also investing $100 million in fast-charging hubs specifically for autonomous vehicles and has struck partnerships with Baidu’s Apollo Go for Dubai, Wayve for London, and Avride for Dallas. Competing with Waymo in its own backyard The strategic shift is unmistakable. Uber plans to deploy Lucid-Nuro robotaxis in San Francisco — Waymo’s home market — by late 2026. In Dallas, Uber will run Avride robotaxis. In London, Uber goes with Wayve while Waymo has its own fleet deal with Moove. The big question is what happens to the Austin and Atlanta deployments, where Waymo vehicles currently operate exclusively through Uber’s app. As former Uber CEO Travis Kalanick recently noted, Waymo is “obviously” ahead in the robotaxi race — but Uber’s current leadership clearly doesn’t want to depend on that lead. Meanwhile, Waymo is scaling fast on its own. The company now delivers around 400,000 paid rides per week across 10 US cities and is targeting 1 million weekly rides by the end of 2026. Electrek’s Take This is Uber trying to have it both ways, and it’s not a great look – take public shots at your partner’s technology with your CTO posting videos mocking Waymo’s driving while calling it “scary” — and then act surprised when that partnership frays. The real story here is that Uber got spooked. The company once believed it could be the platform layer on top of everyone’s robotaxis, taking a cut of every ride without owning any vehicles. But Waymo’s rapid scaling to 400,000 rides per week proved that AV operators might not need Uber at all. Waymo has its own app. It has its own customers. It’s expanding to new cities without Uber’s help. So Uber pivoted to asset ownership — $10 billion worth. The Rivian, Lucid, and Nuro investments are essentially Uber building its own parallel robotaxi fleet to avoid being cut out entirely. We think the hybrid model of mixing human and autonomous drivers makes sense in theory, but publicly trashing the partner that proved the robotaxi model works in the first place is a strange way to manage the transition. The next 18 months will determine whether Uber’s spending spree pays off or whether Waymo’s technology lead proves insurmountable. Stay up to date with the latest content by subscribing to Electrek on Google News. You’re reading Electrek— experts who break news about Tesla, electric vehicles, and green energy, day after day. 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