Stellantis NV (STLA) and Bolt are accelerating the race to put fully autonomous vehicles on European roads, announcing a partnership that could reshape ride-hailing across the continent.
The two companies are joining forces to develop and deploy Level 4 driverless vehicles for commercial use throughout Europe, with ambitions to make autonomous ride-hailing a mainstream reality rather than a sci-fi curiosity.
This is Stellantis making a serious play for market share in a space increasingly crowded with heavyweights like Tesla Inc. (TSLA), General Motors Co. (GM), Ford Motor Co. (F), and Alphabet Inc.'s (GOOGL) (GOOG) Waymo division.
What Level 4 Actually Means
Level 4 driving, technically called High Driving Automation, means the vehicle handles everything on its own within specific geofenced areas and operating conditions. No human intervention required while it's doing its thing. Think of it as a car that can drive itself completely, but only in designated zones where it knows the territory.
How the Partnership Works
The collaboration brings together Stellantis' AV-Ready Platforms (including the eK0 medium van and STLA Small platforms) with Bolt's extensive ride-hailing network, which spans more than 50 countries and 23 EU member states. That's a lot of potential territory for autonomous vehicles.
Bolt plans to integrate Stellantis' autonomous vehicles directly into its shared mobility platform, offering fully driverless ride services to customers who are already using the app.
Stellantis built its AV-Ready Platforms with scalable architecture, advanced sensors, high-performance computing, and redundant systems designed to meet rigorous safety and reliability standards. The goal is also to reduce operating costs for fleet operators, which matters quite a bit when you're trying to make autonomous ride-hailing economically viable at scale.
The Roadmap Ahead
The partners are planning to launch test fleets in European countries beginning in 2026. The rollout will be phased, moving from prototypes to pilot fleets and eventually to industrial-scale production. They're targeting initial production for 2029, which gives them several years to work out the inevitable bugs and regulatory hurdles.
Speaking of regulations, both companies will be working closely with European regulators throughout the process to ensure safe testing, certification, and deployment. They'll also need to comply with Europe's strict data protection and cybersecurity requirements, which are no joke.
STLA Price Action: Stellantis shares were down 0.34% at $11.90 during premarket trading on Tuesday, according to Benzinga Pro data.