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Uber Eats will roll out robot deliveries in California and Texas

The third-party deliverer just announced a decade-long partnership with autonomous vehicle company Nuro.

Jonathan Maze, Senior Financial Editor

September 8, 2022

2 Min Read
Uber Eats and Nuro
The Uber Eats-Nuro deal is the latest indication of interest in robot deliveries by major providers. / Photo courtesy of Uber Eats

Uber Eats users in Houston and Mountain View, Calif., could soon have their burritos delivered by robot.

The third-party deliverer on Thursday announced a 10-year partnership with autonomous vehicle company Nuro to use its person-free vehicles to make deliveries in the U.S.

The partnership will kick off this fall in Houston and Mountain View. Uber and Nuro will then expand the service to the greater Bay Area.

The deal is the latest indication of interest in robot deliveries by major providers. Domino’s has already been testing Nuro vehicles and Chipotle made an investment in the company last year.

“Nuro and Uber share a vision in which technology can make everyday life just a little bit easier,” Noah Zych, global head of autonomous mobility and delivery at Uber, said in a statement. He said that Nuro’s vehicles are a match for the Uber platform.

For delivery providers, the interest in autonomous delivery vehicles is clear: Profitability for deliveries is difficult at best and even companies like Domino’s that use their own drivers have seen costs soar and found it hard to find drivers of late.

That has provided considerable incentive for companies to explore the use of autonomous delivery vehicles to do the job instead. Yet the technology is still in its infancy and much of the country’s transportation network is not set up for robots.

The partnership between Uber Eats and Nuro appears to be the most extensive one yet involving a delivery company. Nuro operates fully autonomous vehicles in three states, including Arizona, and it received a permit from the California Department of Motor Vehicles.

The company argues that its technology can reduce emissions from gas-powered vehicle deliveries. Nuro works with a number of grocers, parcel companies, convenience stores and restaurants.

Its partnership with Uber Eats will give Nuro access to a number of restaurants and merchants. Uber works with 825,000 restaurant and retail companies in more than 11,000 cities around the world.

About the Author

Jonathan Maze

Senior Financial Editor, Nation's Restaurant News

Follow @jonathanmaze

Jonathan Maze covers finance for sister publication Nation's Restaurant News, as well as restaurant chains based in the Midwest. 

Jonathan came to NRN in 2014 after seven years covering restaurants for Franchise Times Magazine and the Restaurant Finance Monitor. There, he created an award-winning blog that reported on and analyzed the restaurant industry. He is routinely quoted in various mainstream press articles, including the Associated Press, Washington Post, Orlando Sentinel, Denver Post and Yahoo! Finance.  He lives in a suburb of Minneapolis with his wife, two children and their cat.

Reach Jonathan at [email protected], or by phone at 651 633-6526.

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