Waymo suspends freeway rides, pauses Atlanta operations amid safety fixes

(Reuters) – Alphabet’s Waymo said on Thursday it has suspended its robotaxi service on freeways in the United ​States and paused its operations in Atlanta, ‌Georgia as it updates software to improve performance around construction zones and flooded roadways.

The suspension comes as Waymo, which has ​been growing its robotaxi operation slowly and steadily ​for years in the U.S., has quickened ⁠the pace of expansion, as others, including Tesla and ​Amazon’s Zoox, step up their push in the sector.

“We ​have temporarily paused freeway operations, as we work to integrate recent technical learnings into our software and expect to resume ​these routes soon,” a Waymo spokesperson said in ​an email.

Freeway trips on Waymo were available in San Francisco, Los ‌Angeles, ⁠Phoenix and Miami.

Waymo was evaluating and improving its performance around certain types of construction zones, the company told Reuters, adding that street operations remained unaffected.

The company ​also paused its ​service in ⁠Atlanta, offered through its partnership with Uber, it said, after an unoccupied Waymo ​robotaxi stopped in flood water on Wednesday.

The ​pause ⁠follows Waymo’s recall of about 3,800 robotaxis in the United States earlier this month, after identifying a risk that ⁠vehicles ​could enter flooded roads with ​higher speed limits, raising safety concerns.

Reporting by Abhirup Roy in San Francisco ​and Nathan Gomes in Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi Majumdar