Skip to main content

Addison Lee and Oxbotica to implement AV services in London by 2021

Addison Lee has partnered with self-driving vehicle software company Oxbotica in a bid to bring autonomous ride-sharing services to London by 2021. Addison Lee, a UK private taxi hire firm, says it will also explore opportunities to provide corporate shuttles, airport and campus-based services. Andy Boland, CEO of Addison Lee, says: “By providing ride-sharing services, we can help address congestion, free space used for parking and improve urban air quality through zero-emission vehicles.” The partners
October 23, 2018 Read time: 3 mins
6687 Addison Lee has partnered with self-driving vehicle software company 8307 Oxbotica in a bid to bring autonomous ride-sharing services to London by 2021.


Addison Lee, a UK private taxi hire firm, says it will also explore opportunities to provide corporate shuttles, airport and campus-based services.

Andy Boland, CEO of Addison Lee, says: “By providing ride-sharing services, we can help address congestion, free space used for parking and improve urban air quality through zero-emission vehicles.”

The partnership will create digital maps of more than 250,000 miles of public roads in and around the capital. These maps will record the position of kerbs, road sign, landmark and traffic lights in preparation for the deployment of autonomous vehicles (AV).

Graeme Smith, CEO of Oxbotica, says the initiative will aid the commercial deployment of the company’s integrated AV and fleet management software systems in complex urban transport conditions.

Addison Lee set-up and led the Merge Greenwich consortium to investigate how AV ride-sharing could be introduced to complement existing public transport services. In addition, Oxbotica has deployed a fleet of AVs in public trials in London and Oxford as part of the Driven consortium.

In response to the project, Russel Goodenough, client managing director, transport sector at 5163 Fujitsu UK and Ireland says the company’s research shows 88% of the public believe technology is driving societal change and half regard this change as ‘overwhelmingly positive.’


However, two-fifths of the public are uncomfortable with being picked up by a self-driving car due to security and safety. Also, less than one in five parents would be okay with putting their child in a driverless car for the school run.

“Driverless cars could boost UK productivity by enabling employees to work while commuting, as well as reduce accidents on the road and the amount of land needed for parking. But, it’s up to everyone in the transport sector to come together to agree exactly how this technology will work in the UK,” Goodenough concludes.

Earlier this %$Linker: 2 Internal <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 36984 0 link-external month false /sections/general/news/driverless-cars-will-be-on-uk-roads-within-four-years-says-minister/ false false%>, OpenText surveyed 2,000 UK consumers, in which over half of the respondents say they would never consider buying or renting a driverless car.

The business information company says six out ten respondents think driverless/autonomous cars will eventually outnumber manually-driven vehicles.

A third of participants believe there will be more driverless/autonomous cars on the road than traditional cars in the next 10-15 years. This view was held by 66% of respondents to a similar OpenText survey in 2017.

Also, the number of UK citizens comfortable with being a passenger in a driverless car has dropped from 24% in 2017 to 19% in this year's results.

Just under a quarter of participants believe AVs will improve road safety compared to 42% of consumers who responded in 2017.  

One in ten participants think the technology will make roads safer on UK motorways, the company adds.  

Mark Bridger, senior vice president, Europe, OpenText, says the more ‘game-changing’ artificial intelligence (AI) technologies such as AVs will take longer to be accepted.

“AI will enable automakers to analyse, adapt, and suggest solutions based on data. As AVs become more common, the data they produce will become a new, powerful asset for organisations,” Bridger adds.

Automotive companies need to ensure the technology is safe and reliable in order to install the necessary level of trust for mass adoption, he concludes.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Nu-phalt acquires Jetpatcher New Zealand
    March 20, 2018
    Nu-phalt now has comprehensive Innovative Patching solutions for every country with its Thermal Repairs and Jetpatcher’s Spary Injection Patching, following an agreement between the two companies ahead of Intertraffic. The partners will work with UK and oversees clients to continue to offer better value bespoke products to the market place. Steve Smith, managing director of the Nu-phalt, said: “We have invested a lot of time and expense into developing a range of innovative patching solutions for the
  • Las Vegas approves Elon Musk tunnel plan
    March 14, 2019
    Hot on the heels of a similar plan in Los Angeles, serial entrepreneur Elon Musk has been given the green light to build underground ‘express-route’ tunnels in Las Vegas, US. The decision by the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority (LVCVA) will allow Musk’s The Boring Company (TBC) to construct and operate a people mover for the Las Vegas Convention Center. The service, expected to cost $35-$55 million, will operate via a loop of tunnels that could carry up to 11,000 passengers per hour in autono
  • European and US mayors support climate change strikes
    September 24, 2019
    European and US city mayors have written an open letter in support of the thousands of people involved in global climate change strikes. Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo, New York’s Bill de Blasio, Los Angeles’ Eric Garcetti and lord mayor of Copenhagen, Frank Jensen, all signed an open letter which said: “We have an opportunity to show, not only that we hear their message, but that they have inspired us to act even faster.” The mayors emphasise that transforming cities to prevent the “climate crisis” will m
  • Beat to bring ride-hailing service to Mexico City
    November 19, 2018
    Beat, a Daimler ride-hailing firm, is opening offices in Mexico City during the first quarter of 2019 and expects to recruit thousands of drivers. Beat says the move is part of a strategy to expand its presence in Latin America. The service and user app are currently available in Lima (Peru), Santiago (Chile), and Bogota (Colombia). Nikos Drandakis, founder and CEO of Beat, says the company initially deployed it service in Mexico City five years ago but did not have the resources at the time to succe