“LET’S Uber.” Few companies offer something so popular that their name
becomes a verb. But that is one of the many achievements of Uber, a
company founded in 2009 which is now the world’s most valuable
startup, worth around $70 billion. Its app can summon a car in moments
in more than 425 cities around the world, to the fury of taxi drivers
everywhere. But Uber’s ambitions, and the expectations underpinning
its valuation, extend much further: using self-driving vehicles, it
wants to make ride-hailing so cheap and convenient that people forgo
car ownership altogether. Not satisfied with shaking up the
$100-billion-a-year taxi business, it has its eye on the far bigger
market for personal transport, worth as much as $10 trillion a year
globally.
http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21706258-worlds-most-valuable-startup-leading-race-transform-future
Uber is not alone in this ambition. Companies big and small have
recognised the transformative potential of electric, self-driving
cars, summoned on demand. Technology firms including Apple, Google and
Tesla are investing heavily in autonomous vehicles; from Ford to
Volvo, incumbent carmakers are racing to catch up. An epic struggle
looms. It will transform daily life as profoundly as cars did in the
20th century: reinventing transport and reshaping cities, while also
dramatically reducing road deaths and pollution.

The wheels of change

























In the short term Uber is in pole position to lead the revolution
because of its dominance of chauffeured ride-hailing, a part of the
transport market that will see some of the fastest growth. Today
ride-hailing accounts for less than 4% of all kilometres driven
globally, but that will rise to more than 25% by 2030, according to
Morgan Stanley, a bank. The ability to summon a car using a smartphone
does not just make it easy for individuals to book a cheaper taxi.
Ride-sharing services like UberPool, which put travellers heading in
the same direction into one vehicle, blur the boundaries between
private and public transport. Helsinki and other cities have been
experimenting with on-demand bus services and apps that enable
customers to plan and book journeys combining trains and buses with
walking and private ride-sharing services. Get it right, and
public-transport networks will be extended to cover the “last mile”
that takes people right to their doorsteps. This will extend the
market for ride-hailing well beyond the wealthy urbanites who are its
main users today.

But in the longer term autonomous vehicles will drive the reinvention
of transport. The first examples have already hit the road. Google is
testing autonomous cars on streets near its headquarters in Mountain
View. A startup called nuTonomy recently launched a self-driving taxi
service in Singapore. Tesla’s electric cars are packed full of
driver-assistance technology. And within the next few weeks Uber
itself will offer riders in Pittsburgh the chance to hail an
autonomous car (though a human will be on hand to take back the wheel
if needed).

Self-driving cars will reinforce trends unleashed by ride-hailing,
making it cheaper and more accessible. The disabled, the old and the
young will find it easier to go where they want. Many more people will
opt out of car ownership altogether. An OECD study that modelled the
use of self-driving cars in Lisbon found that shared autonomous
vehicles could reduce the number of cars needed by 80-90%. As car
ownership declines, the enormous amount of space devoted to parking—as
much as a quarter of the area of some American cities—will be
available for parks and housing instead.

It is not clear which companies will dominate this world or how
profitable it will be. Uber will not win in its current form: a
ride-hailing business which depends on human drivers cannot compete on
roads full of self-driving cars. But this existential threat is
spurring the firm’s innovation (see article). With its strong brand
and large customer base, Uber aims to establish itself as the leading
provider of transport services in a self-driving world. It is also
branching out into new areas, such as food delivery and long-distance
cargo haulage using autonomous trucks. There is logic in this
ambition. Carmakers lack Uber’s experience as a service provider, or
its deep knowledge of demand patterns and customer behaviour.

But firms that pioneer new technological trends do not always manage
to stay on top. Think of Nokia and BlackBerry in smartphones, Kodak in
digital cameras or MySpace in social networking. Much will depend on
which firm best handles the regulators. Technology companies have a
history of trying new things first and asking for permission later.
Uber’s success in ride-hailing owes much to this recipe, yet when it
comes to autonomous vehicles, the combination of vague rules and
imperfect technology can have deadly consequences.

Even for the winners, it is not clear how great the rewards will be.
As more firms pile into ride-sharing, and autonomous vehicles become
part of the mix, the business may prove to be less lucrative than
expected. By matching riders with drivers, Uber can offer transport
services without owning a single vehicle, and keep the lion’s share of
the profits. But if its service becomes an integral part of urban
transport infrastructure, as it hopes, Uber could end up being
regulated, more highly taxed, broken up or all of the above. In a
self-driving world, Uber might also have to own and operate its own
fleet, undermining its “asset-light” model. The would-be high-margin
digital disrupter would then look more like a low-margin airline.

The great road race

For now Uber is the firm to beat in the race to transform the future
of personal transport. Unlike Apple or Google, it is singularly
focused on transport; unlike incumbent carmakers, it does not have a
legacy car-manufacturing business to protect. Its recent rapprochement
with Didi, its main rival in China, has removed a major distraction,
allowing it to devote its $9 billion war chest to developing new
technology. Its vision of the future is plausible and compelling. It
could yet prove a Moses company, never reaching its promised land—it
might end up like Hoover, lending its name to a new product category
without actually dominating it. But whether Uber itself wins or loses,
we are all on the road to Uberworld.

-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU


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