Self-driving VW ID.Buzz electric vans start testing ahead of commercial service in 2025

Volkswagen Group plans to launch a commercial self-driving taxi and delivery service in Hamburg, Germany, via its Moia ride-sharing business, starting in 2025.

The service will use self-driving vans based on Volkswagen’s upcoming electric van previewed by 2017’s ID.Buzz concept, and rely on a SAE-scale Level 4 self-driving system developed by Argo AI, which VW Group owns together with Ford.

Level 4 cars can operate fully on their own, though only in set conditions, the main one typically being a geofenced area. The highest rating on the SAE scale is a Level 5 car. Such a car would be able to function on its own in all of the same conditions expected of a human.

Volkswagen MOIA electric ride-pooling van

Volkswagen MOIA electric ride-pooling van

While VW Group’s commercial service is still a few years out, the automaker started testing prototype versions of the self-driving vans this summer. The prototypes are initially testing on dedicated tracks near the main airport of Munich, Germany, close to where Argo AI’s European headquarters are located, but will expand to more areas as development progresses.

Ford is expected to offer its first commercial service using Argo AI’s self-driving system as early as 2022.

Argo AI has already been testing its self-driving system in Germany. It also has prototypes testing in six cities in the U.S. Its main test site is in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where the company is headquartered. The company has also announced plans to add its prototypes to Lyft’s network in some U.S. cities starting in 2021.