Microsoft joins in a new $2 billion investment in GM's self-driving car company
New York (CNN)Microsoft has joined in a $2 billion investment in Cruise, the self-driving car company mostly owned by GM.
The investment, announced Tuesday, puts Cruise's total value at $30 billion, Cruise and Microsoft said.
Microsoft (MSFT) joins Honda (HMC),
already a major investor and partner in Cruise, and various
institutional investors in the $2 billion total equity investment. The
companies did not divulge how large of a portion of that investment
Microsoft is making or how large of a stake in Cruise Microsoft will
receive as a result of its investment. However, a Cruise spokesperson
confirmed that General Motors will retain a majority stake.
Cruise and GM (GM) will also use Microsoft's Azure cloud computing platform to help develop vehicles and services, the companies added.
Microsoft joins other tech companies that have ventured into self-driving vehicles. Apple has reportedly
restarted plans to create it's own electric self-driving car. Waymo, a
leading competitor to Cruise, is a subsidiary of Google's parent company
Alphabet.
Cruise
was founded in 2013 and acquired by GM in 2016 for an undisclosed
amount. The company's current president, Dan Ammann, had been president
of GM until joining Cruise in 2018.
GM executives said in 2017 that they expected driverless taxi services to one day be a bigger and more profitable business
than selling vehicles directly to customers. At the time, though, they
also expected Cruise to be ready to serve paying customers by the end of
2019.
Honda first teamed up with GM on Cruise in 2018, announcing
then that it would invest $2 billion over 12 years. Honda's
participation in this latest round of investment is in addition to that,
a Cruise spokesman said,
Honda worked with GM to develop a purpose-built self-driving car, called the Origin,
for things like taxi and delivery services. It has no steering wheels
or pedals, and is designed to function entirely without a driver. GM
announced last fall that it will be built at GM's Factory Zero, formerly Detroit-Hamtramck Assembly, a factory in Michigan that is being modified to build only electric vehicles.
Cruise
will need an exemption from the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration to operate the Origin because it doesn't have traditional
car components like a steering wheel.
The
company has been using modified Chevrolet Bolt EVs to test its
technology and has recently begun testing cars in San Francisco with no
human driver inside the vehicle. Previously, the cars had always had a
human driver in the driver's seat to take over if needed.
The
company hasn't lived up to its projections so far. In 2017, GM said it
would be mass-producing fully autonomous electric cars by the end of
2019. It also announced plans in 2017 to test self-driving vehicles in
New York City, but has yet to do so.
The
entire self-driving sector has struggled to live up to the hype that
has dominated much of the decade. Companies are realizing the immense
challenge of building a self-driving car that works, and then proving to
regulators that it is safe.
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