Einride Gets Approval for Driverless Electric Freight Vehicle

The public road pilot will take place in the third quarter of 2022.

Aerial photo of an Einride Autonomous Electric Transport (AET) vehicle.
Aerial photo of an Einride Autonomous Electric Transport (AET) vehicle.
Business Wire

Freight technology company Einride announced today that it has received approval from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) to operate its Autonomous Electric Transport (AET) vehicles on U.S. public roads.

With this approval, Einride will conduct a public road pilot to support operational flows for GE Appliances to showcase the Einride Podโ€™s functionality for future commercialization. The autonomous and electric Einride Podโ€™s design does not leave room for a driver on board and is instead remotely monitored by a Remote Pod Operator, marking this pilot as an industry first for this new type of vehicle.

The Einride Pod will operate on public roads with mixed traffic while executing real life workflows. This will include the movement of goods and coordinating with teams at various warehouses for loading and unloading. A Remote Pod Operator will be remotely monitoring the vehicle at all times โ€“ a new role that Einride sees critical in safely scaling autonomous vehicles by keeping humans in the loop and creating jobs to fulfill a future way of shipping.

โ€œThis is a type of vehicle that has never before been seen on U.S. roads and marks a major milestone as a turning point for the future of the freight industry,โ€ said Robert Falck, CEO and Founder at Einride. โ€œWe know the autonomous and electric technology of our pod will not only revolutionize transportation but also create thousands of jobs and help America stay competitive.โ€

The public road pilot, which will take place in the third quarter of 2022, will be done at a GE Appliances manufacturing facility to complement other existing operations already in place together. Einride was the first to have a fleet of operational autonomous and electric vehicles on U.S. soil in partnership with GEA in 2021.

More in Automotive