Self-driving truck startup Waabi on Tuesday shared at TechCrunch Disrupt 2025 the launch of its new self-driving truck, the Volvo VNL Autonomous Truck, created in partnership with Volvo.
The announcement comes eight months after the Uber and Nvidia-backed startup announced it would partner with Volvo Autonomous Solutions to use Waabi’s software stack to build custom trucks based on Volvo’s self-driving platform.
Waabi CEO Raquel Urtasun said at TechCrunch Disrupt’s AI stage that the company could be the first to commercialize self-driving trucks without human safety drivers or supervisors. The comment was a bit of a criticism of competitor Aurora, which launched commercial self-driving services earlier this year. The company added human observers in the truck cabs a few weeks later.
“Currently, you can drive on regular roads in Texas, but you’ll be seeing us across the United States for the next few years,” said Urtasun, who was chief scientist at Uber ATG before launching Waabi in 2021.
Warbi’s rival Aurora has a similar deal with Volvo, and the two companies announced self-driving trucks in May 2024. Earlier this year, Aurora began commercial service with human observers on the route between Dallas and Houston. On Tuesday, the company announced it would expand into El Paso. Waabi also uses the same truck, but features Waabi technology such as the sensor suite, computing, and Waabi Driver software.
Waabi’s self-driving system, called Waabi Driver, is an end-to-end AI model that allows trucks to scale autonomous driving across different regions, including highways and roads. Waabi says this will enable commercial operations to be scalable, meet customer needs and work within existing logistics operations.
“Volvo VNL is built from the ground up with redundancy in mind, allowing us to eliminate human drivers and create a global, safe and robust product,” said Urtasun. “Our sensor pods are extremely lightweight, making them very easy to integrate on the factory line.”
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Waabi’s partnership with Volvo builds on its investment in startups in 2023 through the automaker’s venture arm, Volvo Group Venture Capital. Volvo participated in Warbi’s $200 million Series B in 2024.
Description: Aurora did not initially enter commercial service with a human observer in the driver’s seat.
