Waymo and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles first partnered on building autonomous vehicles four years ago, and the result has been the self-driving minivan, now a fairly common sight in parts of California and Arizona, where they are used as robotaxis.
Now the companies intend to spread the technology beyond the Chrysler Pacificas and throughout the FCA fleet. They are also thinking beyond cars and embarking on a project involving delivery vehicles.
Waymo, a unit of Google parent Alphabet, and FCA said Wednesday they will deepen their relationship and build commercial vehicles for transporting cargo.
They will initially integrate Waymo's self-driving system onto the Ram ProMaster van, which the companies say is a "highly configurable platform that will enable access to a broad range of global commercial customers."
The news comes amid a series of industry developments related to self-driving delivery vehicles. Complications in deploying passenger-carrying autonomous taxis, combined with a COVID-inspired acceleration of delivery trends, have brought newfound focus on autonomous trucking and goods-carrying capabilities.
On the passenger-vehicle front, FCA CEO Mike Manley said the automaker has chosen Waymo as its exclusive provider of Level 4 self-driving systems for passenger vehicles.
The two companies will work together to deploy Waymo's self-driving system across FCA's "full product portfolio." Further, Waymo says the exclusivity also means FCA will no longer work with companies such as Aurora Innovation, Voyage and others to jointly integrate self-driving systems on the Chrysler Pacifica minivans.
No timeframe for deploying such vehicles either in test scenarios or for consumer use is yet available. Still, Waymo's technology aboard passenger vehicles may be an advantage for Stellantis, the name FCA and PSA will use for their merged company, in someday wooing tech-savvy consumers across the automaker's global footprint.
"Together, we'll introduce the Waymo Driver throughout the FCA brand portfolio, opening up new frontiers for ride hailing, commercial delivery and personal-use vehicles around the world," Waymo CEO John Krafcik said in a written statement.
Waymo already has a partnership with Renault-Nissan that has established early aspects of what could someday become worldwide scale.
The prospect of spreading Waymo's self-driving technology throughout its lineup may be the big news for FCA. But the days when car companies sell Level 4 capabilities –- those in which occupants have zero role in the driving process –- in personally owned vehicles are far off.