Aurora has quietly notched a major milestone in the race to commercialize autonomous vehicles, launching a fully driverless trucking service that has already logged more than 1,200 miles on public highways in Texas.
The company’s 18-wheelers have been shuttling frozen pastries while operating without a human in the cab along a stretch of Interstate 45 between Dallas and Houston, marking a turning point for both the freight industry and the future of automated transport.
Aurora’s launch on April 27 followed four years of on-road testing with safety drivers and the completion of a rigorous “safety case” — an evidence-based analysis used to justify the system’s readiness for public deployment, according to the New York Times.
Since then, the company says its Aurora Driver system has completed more than 1,200 fully autonomous miles with freight partners Uber Freight and Hirschbach Motor Lines.
“This was a surreal moment,” Aurora co-founder and CEO Chris Urmson, who rode in the back seat during the inaugural round-trip haul, wrote in a blog entry.
“I’m cruising down the highway at 65 miles per hour, not behind the wheel, but in the rear seat, watching the scenery unfold as a truckload of pastries are driven by the technology I helped create… And yet, it’s all pretty boring. That’s exactly the way it should be.”
Urmson, a former leader of Google’s self-driving car project, said Aurora’s trucks are outfitted with a 360-degree sensor suite capable of detecting objects from up to 1,000 feet away.
The system is designed to drive cautiously, obeying speed limits, avoiding aggressive maneuvers and using air bursts to keep sensors clean in rain.
For now, the vehicles only operate during daylight hours and in good weather, though Aurora intends to expand routes to El Paso and Phoenix by the end of 2025.
Still, the rapid rollout has raised alarms among safety experts, labor advocates and even seasoned truckers.
“My initial thought is: It’s scary,” Angela Griffin, a veteran driver who has experienced firsthand how weather and construction zones can confuse even human drivers, told the Times.
“I don’t see how a driverless truck would have been able to read and recognize the threat that was imminent.”
Regulatory oversight of autonomous trucks remains limited.
The Department of Transportation’s Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration has yet to issue comprehensive rules specific to automated freight, though it says it is “actively working” with state governments and industry stakeholders to modernize safety protocols.
Some experts worry that states like Texas — which welcomes innovation with fewer restrictions — could become testing grounds for unproven tech.
“There’s still no requirement for independent checks and balances,” Philip Koopman, an autonomous vehicle safety researcher at Carnegie Mellon University, told the Times.
“Aurora’s being more cautious than most, but the regulatory structure simply isn’t there yet.”
Despite these concerns, some industry veterans believe automation could ultimately make roads safer.
“I think the growth of jobs will outpace the addition of autonomous trucks,” said Gary Buchs, a longtime driver who now supports autonomous technologies.
“Younger people want the jobs changed.”
Aurora insists its technology is not designed to replace human drivers, but to meet rising demand for freight and address labor shortages.
“It is a noble job,” Urmson said. “That said, people don’t particularly want to do it anymore.”
With only two trucks currently running driver-free — and with an observer temporarily reinstated at the truck manufacturer’s request — Aurora’s rollout is still in its early stages.
The company has plans to scale to at least 20 trucks this year.