
The dream of driverless taxis continues in the Gulf, where the conflict with Iran has slowed but not stopped progress on autonomous transport in Abu Dhabi, Dubai, and Riyadh.
Uber and WeRide added another driverless route in Saudi’s capital this week, linking shopping centers Hayat Mall and Riyadh Gallery. The expanded service comes after the vehicles completed more than 1,700 trips in a trial phase, according to the regulator.
Uber and WeRide have also launched fully driverless services in Dubai, beginning in popular residential and commercial areas Jumeirah and Umm Suqeim, with no safety monitor on board. Separately, Dubai Taxi Company plans to deploy more than 1,000 driverless cars in the city with Baidu’s Apollo Go, starting with a fleet of 50 this year. Earlier this month, Autogo, part of Abu Dhabi-backed technology company K2, began offering rides on Yas Island, and it plans to expand to Saadiyat and Al Maryah islands.
All this is bad news for the region’s taxi drivers, a largely South Asian group whose business is already down due to the conflict with Iran.
LATEST POSTS
The Most Compelling Innovation Developments Somewhat recently
RFK Jr. guts the US childhood vaccine schedule despite its decades-long safety record
The most effective method to Promoter for Cellular breakdown in the lungs Mindfulness in Your People group
Investigating Inside Plan and Home Style: Change Your Residing Space
New materials, old physics – the science behind how your winter jacket keeps you warm
Our 10 favorite Space.com reader astronomy photos of 2025
Scientist turns people’s mental images into text using ‘mind-captioning’ technology
Manual for Conservative SUVs For Seniors
Building a Maintainable Closet: Individual Excursions in Moral Style













