French auto giant PSA hopes to launch a car-sharing service in 2018 in the US, its latest baby step back after Peugeot exited the market in 1991. PSA in October launched in Seattle Free2Move, a smartphone application that aggregates car-sharing programs for users.
Car-sharing apps allow users to rent vehicles for short periods of time, in contrast to traditional rental companies. The next move is to introduce PSA's own car sharing program in which it would rent out Peugeot built autos to consumers, said Larry Dominique, PSA's North American chief. "Aggregation is the first step and in 2018 we hope to launch one or two additional physical mobility services as well," Dominique told AFP in an interview ahead of next week's Detroit Auto Show. "We're still negotiating with the cities."
The initiatives are part of the a strategy announced in April 2016 by Carlos Tavares, the chief executive of PSA, which sells cars made by Citroen and Opel, in addition to Peugeot. Peugeot withdrew from the US in 1991 following years of sales declines amid stiff competition from US and Japanese automakers. But company officials point to a long history in the US before that.
Tavares has described a gradual US ramp-up process that could take 10 years in which PSA first engages through car-sharing apps and car sharing services before actually selling vehicles down the road. Part of the aim is to better learn customer preferences before making deeper investments. "We need to think about our approach to the US market in a new way," Dominique said. "We're trying to learn as much as we can." "There's no rush, no deadline for me to start selling cars in North America."
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