It has been reported by The Verge that General Motors is investing $850 in the company Cruise, which is that of an autonomous taxi service.
As testing of the company’s driverless vehicles resumes, the investment ought to assist in covering operational costs by providing financial support.
Since the latter part of the previous year, Cruise’s taxis have been grounded. This is because California has prohibited Cruise from utilizing its vehicles within the state, and all 950 cars have been voluntarily recalled that require software updates.
An Accident Involving a Pedestrian and Cruise
After an incident that occurred in San Francisco in October of last year, in which one of Cruise’s vehicles collided with a person who had been struck by another vehicle and dragged them twenty feet, this follows. As part of the deal, the injured woman is expected to get at least eight million dollars.
Weeks had passed since the last collision in which a Cruise car failed to yield to a first responder and crashed into a fire engine.
Cruise Reopens
Cruise had a difficult year in 2017 as it let go of 24 percent of its employees and saw eleven executives, including co-founders Dan Kan and Kyle Vogt, quit. GM lost $3.48 billion on the business in 2023.
At the moment, Cruise runs robotaxis in Phoenix, Dallas, and San Francisco. It is presently deploying its cars to Houston, but human safety drivers remain in command. In the upcoming weeks, the business intends to begin supervised autonomous driving.
Despite these difficulties, GM is devoted to Cruise and still intends to play a significant role in the autonomous driving sector, hoping that its costly investment will eventually pay off.