Nissan, Uber, Wayve unveil robotaxi tie-up

TOKYO, (Reuters) – Nissan Motor, Uber Technologies and British startup Wayve said on ​Thursday they will collaborate on developing robotaxis, aiming ‌to roll out a pilot programme in Tokyo by late 2026.

Uber’s first autonomous vehicle partnership in Japan, the plan provides ​for Nissan Leaf electric vehicles equipped with Wayve’s ​self-driving technology to be made available to customers ⁠via Uber, the companies said in a joint statement.

“We ​have been testing our technology throughout Japan since early 2025,” ​Wayve CEO Alex Kendall said in the statement.

“Partnering with Uber and Nissan to begin pilot deployment of Robotaxis allows us to ​introduce this technology in a responsible way.”

The vehicles will ​operate on Uber’s platform in the initial phase, with a trained ‌safety ⁠driver in the cars. Uber plans to launch the service through a licensed taxi partner in Japan.

Nissan CEO Ivan Espinosa told reporters that the companies were discussing ​whether to extend ​their cooperation ⁠to markets other than Japan.

Wayve, backed by SoftBank and Nvidia, partnered with Uber in ​August 2024. The two companies aim to ​launch services ⁠in more than 10 cities worldwide, including London later this year.

Last September, Nissan said it had begun testing a driver-assistance ⁠system ​using Wayve’s technology, ahead of ​a planned launch in Japan in financial year 2027.

Reporting by Maki Shiraki ​and Daniel Leussink; Editing by Clarence Fernandez and Thomas Derpinghaus