New York Post - USA (2020-12-03)

(Antfer) #1
New York Post, Thursday, December 3, 2020

nypost.com

Amazon said Wednesday
that five companies, includ-
ing Uber and JetBlue, have
joined its Climate Pledge, a
commitment to be net-zero
carbon by 2040.
CEO Jeff Bezos last year
pledged to make the largest
US e-commerce company
net carbon-neutral by 2040.
The other three companies
to join are: Rivian, Cabify and
Boom Supersonic. So far, 18
companies have signed up
for the pledge, which was
established in 2019. Reuters


Uber, JetBlue


in carbon vow


Uber shares spiked al-
most 7 percent Wednesday
after reports emerged that
the company was looking
into selling its flying taxi
business.
The ride-hail giant is in ad-
vanced talks to sell Uber Ele-
vate to aerospace firm Joby
Aviation, Axios reported,
with news of the talks com-
ing as Uber is already looking
to cut back on cash burn as
the COVID-19 pandemic has
pummeled its core business.
Uber Elevate is the San
Francisco-based company’s
division dedicated to aerial
pursuits, and has been devel-
oping a flying taxi prototype.
Uber did not respond to a
request for comment. It is un-
clear if the sale would impact
Uber Copter, the company’s
helicopter service from
lower Manhattan to JFK.
Shares of Uber finished up
$3.46 Wednesday to close at
$53.09.
Earlier this month Uber
was revealed to be in talks to
sell its Advance Technolo-
gies Group — which focuses
on autonomous vehicle tech-
nology — to self-driving car
startup Aurora.
Nicolas Vega


Uber flie$


on air taxi


sale news


Uber Air TAxi
Aerospace buyer eyed.

Discovery is launching a
new streaming service, called
discovery+, and has a US dis-
tribution deal with Verizon
Communications that will
make it available to 50 million
customers on day one, fol-
lowing Disney’s lead.
Discovery+ will be availa-
ble on Jan. 4 in the United
States and have 55,000 epi-
sodes from channels in the
Discovery portfolio, which
includes HGTV, Food Net-
work and Animal Planet.
The service will be free for
up to 12 months for new and

existing Verizon customers,
depending on their plan. Peo-
ple who are ineligible for the
free trial can subscribe for
$4.99 per month with ads, or
$6.99 per month ad-free.
Verizon played a role in the
success of Walt Disney’s Dis-
ney+ streaming service by
making it available to mil-
lions of wireless customers.
The service launched in No-
vember 2019 and had 73.7
million subscribers a year
later. Disney has not dis-
closed how many of those
subscribers paid for the ser-

vice or received it free
through Verizon.
The discovery+ launch
comes as COVID-19-related
restrictions have kept people
home, fueling streaming-sub-
scriber growth. More than
half of US households now
subscribe to multiple stream-
ing services, according to a
study from Leichtman Re-
search Group. Discovery’s
challenge is to be counted
among one of them.
Discovery+ has already
launched in India, the UK
and Ireland. Reuters

Coming soon: Discovery+


Bitcoin rewards card


Visa, Evolve Bank and
credit card firm Deserve are
partnering with cryptocur-
rency startup BlockFi to offer
a credit card that lets users
earn bitcoin on purchases.
Card users will receive 1.5
percent cash back on an ac-
crual basis for every transac-
tion made on the card, which
will then be converted to bit-
coin and placed monthly into
a BlockFi account. The ser-
vice will initially be offered
only in the US and the ship-
ping of cards will start in
spring 2021, BlockFi said
Tuesday in a blog post.

The move comes after Pay-
Pal in October said it would
allow customers to hold bit-
coin and other virtual coins
in its online wallet and shop
using cryptocurrencies, a
move that could help bitcoin
and rival cryptocurrencies
gain wider acceptance.
Bitcoin surged about 160
percent this year on demand
for riskier assets amid un-
precedented fiscal and mon-
etary stimulus, interest in as-
sets perceived as inflation-re-
sistant and a belief that cryp-
tocurrencies will win main-
stream acceptance. Reuters

By Nicolas Vega

SpaceX may have only just put
humans into space for the first time,
but that isn’t stopping CEO Elon
Musk from making bold new prom-
ises.
The billionaire Tesla executive on
Tuesday said that he is “highly con-
fident” that SpaceX will be able to
send humans to Mars by 2026, if not
earlier.
Speaking at an Axel Springer
event in Berlin, Musk didn’t hedge
his ambitions to put a man on the
Red Planet.
“We want to send an uncrewed
vehicle there in two years,” Musk
said. “I think if you said [we’ll put a
human on Mars] six years from
now, I’d say I’m highly confident,
and if we get lucky maybe four
years.”
The world’s second-richest man,
behind only Amazon CEO and fel-
low rocket-company owner Jeff Be-

zos, said one of his main concerns is
developing the technology neces-
sary to make human life “multiplan-
etary,” saying he wanted to see a
base on the moon and “a city on
Mars.”
“I think it’s important that we
strive to have a self-sustaining city
on Mars as soon as possible. I’m op-
timistic about the future on Earth,
but I think it’s important to have life
insurance for life as a whole.”
Musk first unveiled his plans to
colonize Mars in 2016. Two years
later, he said there was a “70-per-
cent chance” he would move to
Mars but also admitted there was a
“good chance” he could die on his
way there.
The closest Musk has gotten to
sending a person to Mars so far is
the cherry-red Tesla Roadster he
launched into space back in 2018,
which recently completed a flyby of
the planet.
[email protected]

get reDDy


for man


on mars


By 2026, Elon vows


Post photo composite/NASA//Alamy images

OUT TO
LAUNCH:
Elon Musk
is “highly
confident”
his SpaceX will
send people to
Mars in 2026,
maybe sooner.
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