Tesla to Finally Roll Out Robotaxi Tonight

Elon Musk Is Betting the Company鈥檚 Future On It

Elon Musk
Elon Musk (Ludovic Marin/AFP/Getty Images)

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Elon Musk went all-in to get robotaxis onto roads, sacrificing a widely anticipated cheaper car, gutting teams focused on other projects and downplaying Tesla Inc.鈥檚 sales slowdown.

So when Musk finally unveils autonomous taxi prototypes late Oct. 10, the CEO will have a lot to prove. He鈥檚 promised nothing short of a new era for transportation, in which Teslas with empty driver seats zip around with paying passengers, making money for their owners while they鈥檙e asleep or at work.

For all of Musk鈥檚 years of premature predictions that autonomous Teslas were just around the corner, investors have bid up the company鈥檚 shares in recent months in anticipation of a product that鈥檚 actually ready, or at least close to it. Meeting those expectations will require credible plans to leapfrog the likes of Alphabet Inc.-backed Waymo, which leads a field of companies already offering driverless rides.

鈥淚f they just show something that doesn鈥檛 actually demonstrate the technology, a prototype of a vehicle that doesn鈥檛 move, that鈥檚 going to go over like a lead balloon,鈥 said Gene Munster, managing partner of growth-investment firm Deepwater Asset Management.



The event Tesla has dubbed 鈥淲e, Robot鈥 鈥 a likely nod to Isaac Asimov鈥檚 I, Robot collection of short science-fiction stories 鈥 is scheduled to begin at 7 p.m. California time at Warner Bros. Discovery Inc.鈥檚 movie studio near Los Angeles. Wall Street analysts and many of Tesla鈥檚 most prominent influencers are among those invited to attend.

Here鈥檚 what to expect:

Cybercab

Musk has referred to the event鈥檚 showpiece product as Tesla鈥檚 purpose-built robotaxi, or Cybercab. It鈥檚 expected to differ from the carmaker鈥檚 other models in that human drivers won鈥檛 need to be present to operate the car.

Tesla鈥檚 robotaxis likely will use a combination of cameras and computing power to navigate the roads. While self-driving vehicles from General Motors Co.鈥檚 Cruise and Waymo also rely on laser-based sensors known as Lidar, Musk has dismissed them as too expensive and unnecessary.

Design

Tesla has kept the final design of the robotaxi under wraps, but the vehicle is expected to have two front seats and two doors that open upward like butterfly wings, according to people familiar with the matter.

There鈥檚 a chance Tesla also reveals another new car. Some investors believe that Musk will showcase some kind of robovan that can carry a dozen people or more, or be used as an autonomous delivery vehicle.

Technology

For the Cybercab to work, Tesla will need to make major strides in artificial intelligence.

Thousands of existing Tesla owners have for years been paying thousands of dollars for a suite of features the company markets as Full Self-Driving, or FSD. The company鈥檚 driver-assistance features require constant supervision and don鈥檛 make its vehicles autonomous.

The CEO is also expected to talk about Tesla鈥檚 plans to develop FSD for its Semi truck, and how he sees the technology being used to haul cargo, two people familiar said. However, there won鈥檛 be any demos of the Semi using FSD at the event, the people said, asking not to be identified because they weren鈥檛 authorized to speak.

Regulation

Assuming Tesla can pull off the necessary technological breakthroughs, it will need regulatory approval to launch.

Tesla notably opted to hold its robotaxi unveiling at a Warner Bros. lot with non-public roads. Offering a commercial passenger service with autonomous vehicles in California requires a deployment permit Tesla hasn鈥檛 applied for. Its competitors are further ahead in this respect.

Business Model

Musk has described the service he wants to offer as working something like a combination of Uber Technologies Inc. and Airbnb Inc. (Joe Gebbia, an Airbnb co-founder, joined Tesla鈥檚 board two years ago.)

Individual Tesla owners would be able to lend their vehicles to a Tesla fleet when they鈥檙e not using them. Those cars would be supplemented by the purpose-built robotaxi to meet demand.

Optimus

Musk has been focused on expanding the capabilities and eventually producing a humanoid robot, called Optimus.

Given the 鈥淲e, Robot鈥 event name, the CEO is expected to give some sort of update on the product, which he鈥檚 said will be manufactured in limited quantities starting next year.

Cheaper Cars

Although much of the hype leading up to the event revolves around the robotaxi, Tesla has a more immediate issue: It鈥檚 on track to record its first ever annual vehicle sales decline.

Tesla delivered just shy of 463,000 cars and trucks in the third quarter, missing analyst estimates. The company has had little to say about more affordable models first teased in April and slated for production next year.

The company has said these vehicles will be built on existing production lines, so they could just be cheaper versions of its best-selling Model 3 sedan or Model Y sport utility vehicle.

Written by Dana Hull, Kara Carlson and Ed Ludlow

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