Automotive
New Vantage Roadster: Engineered for Real Drivers, Designed for Open Air Thrills
Aston Martin has introduced the new Vantage Roadster, a convertible stablemate of the world-beating Vantage Coupe. Launched in 2024, the new Vantage continued the marque’s shift in sector defining luxury and dynamic credentials, far exceeding the capabilities and engagement of any Vantage before. Now, Vantage Roadster arrives to enhance the real driving experience even further.
Powered by the Aston Martin 4.0-litre V8 twin-turbo engine delivering 665PS/800Nm, Vantage Roadster brings all the class leading performance, dynamic sensations and visual excitement of the coupe, with an additional dimension of top-down freedom and thrills for those addicted to open air motoring. Vantage Roadster brings a new level of emotion to the already unforgettable driving experience, broadening still the phenomenal appeal of this quintessential, yet state-of-the-art British sports car.
New Vantage Roadster has been designed to offer all the style, sense of freedom and adventure for which convertibles are known, but without the limitations traditionally inherent in their design. As beautiful as its hard top companion, with minimal weight increase and the fastest operating fully automatic roof on the market, Vantage Roadster is a convertible without compromise and a worthy new member of the Vantage family.
It continues a tradition of open top Aston Martin Vantage models that date back 75 years to the launch of the Vantage engine upgrade pack for the DB2 (available both as a coupe – known as a saloon – and convertible – known as drophead coupe) in 1950, which featured larger carburettors and a higher compression ratio to raise power for the 2.6-litre twin cam engine from 105bhp to a heady 125bhp.
This year, Aston Martin is celebrating the 20th anniversary of the 2005 introduction of the V8 Vantage. The first Gaydon-built ‘modern’ Aston Martin to use the name and the first Vantage to be a distinct model in its own right, rather than a derivative, with its own Roadster version arriving just one year later.
Aston Martin Chief Executive Officer, Adrian Hallmark, said: “The technical and dynamic capability of New Vantage delivered outstanding performance; far beyond any other preceding Vantage and it is now seen as a true class leading sports car. Vantage Roadster was no different feat in that it is a fully reinvented experience, with all the benefits of the Coupe and no compromise to refinement or performance through meticulous work by our engineering and dynamics teams. Vantage Roadster delivers a world-class roof-down driving experience like no other.”

Engineering
Key to Vantage Roadster’s ability to retain the crucial dynamic attributes of Vantage Coupe is that both cars were designed and engineered in parallel rather than in sequence, the Roadster therefore being a fully developed model in its own right, allowing the team to implement features and attributes that result in zero compromises to performance, ride and handling and excessive additional weight.
Compared to the previous Vantage Roadster, Aston Martin’s bespoke 4.0-litre V8 twin-turbo engine has seen power and torque rise by an unprecedented 155PS and 115Nm thanks to larger turbochargers, revised camshaft profiles and an optimised compression ratio. With a total of 665PS and an incredible 800Nm of torque running through an eight-speed paddle-shift transmission to an electronically controlled limited slip differential driving the rear wheels alone, Vantage Roadster combines explosive performance (0-60mph in 3.5seconds, top speed 202mph) and state-of-the-art technology within the classic, front engine, rear-wheel drive configuration adored by those who simply love to drive. With thanks to a retractable roof, even more of the inimitable V8 thunder can be heard by occupants, emanating from under Vantage’s dramatically sloping bonnet and exhaust tail pipes.
Thanks to its ultra-stiff yet lightweight aluminium structure, composite body panels and 49:51 front to rear weight distribution, Vantage Roadster provides the ideal platform for the suspension to act upon. Featuring race-inspired unequal length double wishbones at the front, a multi-link rear axle, coil springs and Bilstein DTX adaptive dampers (with a bespoke tune), along with a non-isolated steering column, Vantage Roadster provides the precision, balance, poise and, above all, the confidence that are the unmistakable hallmarks of the truly great high performance driver’s car.

Brake discs measuring 410mm at the front (with carbon ceramic brakes) clamped by six piston monoblock calipers ensure Vantage Roadster can shed speed even more rapidly than it is gained – and do so repeatedly. The necessary grip is provided by bespoke Michelin Pilot Sport S 5 tyres, specially developed by Michelin and tuned by Aston Martin with a compound tailored to the specific requirements of the Vantage. These provide not just superlative grip in both dry and wet conditions but also outstanding steering feel and progressive breakaway characteristics.
All of this hardware is supported by an electronic architecture using six axis sensors, capable of creating an astonishingly detailed overview of precisely how the car is behaving, allowing the ESP system to adopt optimal settings both for the road conditions and the style in which the car is being driven. In addition, Vantage Roadster carries over the innovative Advanced Traction Control system from the Vantage Coupe, allowing the driver to choose one of eight settings for the traction control; the default setting of five is optimised for achieving the fastest, cleanest laps. The lower the number the greater the level of intervention, providing an additional level of reassurance and safety in, for example, adverse weather conditions, while drivers wishing to hone their skills most likely on track have the option to turn traction control off and experience the car free of any electronic influence.
From the outset several measures were designed into the structure of Vantage Roadster to ensure the Vantage spirit, astonishing ability and love of the open road were passed across from Coupe to Roadster in undiluted form. To do this, two primary goals, traditionally seen as diametrically opposed objectives, were given top priority from the start. These were to keep the Roadster as light as possible relative to the Coupe and to maintain structural rigidity at an outstandingly high level for a convertible car.
These include identifying the load paths through the structure and body and modifying the way the body is attached at the back of the car to add additional stiffness relative to the Coupe. In addition, weight-optimised shear panels have been added in strategic positions to laterally stiffen the structure further even than the Coupe in order to offset the reduction in rigidity inherent in any convertible car.
The roof itself comes in ‘Z-fold’ configuration, which is both faster and lighter than a traditional ‘K-fold’ roof and removes the requirement for a tonneau cover, further saving weight and lowering the centre of gravity. The roof on Vantage Roadster can be opened or closed at any speed up to 31mph (50km/h) with the entire roof fold operation (open or closed) taking just 6.8sec – the fastest fully automatic deployable roof mechanism on the market today. Additionally, this slick operation can be performed when seated in the car or remotely via the key, so long as the operator is within a two-metre radius of the car.

Despite the extraordinary speed of the roof operation and its lightweight design, no sacrifice to refinement has been made. The roof comprises no fewer than eight levels of insulation ensuring that cabin sound levels with the roof up are comparable to those of Vantage coupe.
The Z-fold action results in a simpler and therefore lighter roof, leading to Vantage Roadster delivering an overall weight increase of just 60kg, an outstanding achievement – and class leading – for a car in this category.
Even the roll-over structure has been carefully optimised to be both as strong and lightweight as possible. The aluminium Roll-Over and Protection System (ROPS) is formed using a process called ‘Castrusion’ for the way it combines optimal elements from both casting and extrusion to create a system that is robust, light and simple to package.
Finally, attention has also been paid to the suspension system to account both for the change in mass and weight distribution. Minimal though these changes are, the fact that Vantage Roadster has recalibrated software for its rear dampers and retuned mountings for its rear mounted gearbox just shows the lengths Aston Martin engineers go to in order to ensure a full measure of the legendary Vantage handling prowess is carried over from Coupe to Roadster.
Simon Newton, Director of Vehicle Performance, said “Vantage made headlines last year for the huge increases in power and torque over the outgoing model, and the vivid way in which it deployed such immense performance completely seduced enthusiasts and purists alike. Developing both Vantage Coupe and Roadster simultaneously meant we were able to retain the outrageous dynamic capabilities and agile sporting character of Vantage with no compromise upon removal of the roof, allowing drivers to revel at the limit with the added exposure to the elements. This has been achieved from meticulous optimisations in the body structure combined with Roadster specific chassis tuning carried out by our skilled dynamics team and is the perfect stablemate to its Coupe cohort.”

Design
It was essential that all of the visceral impact and beauty of Vantage Coupe was retained for Vantage Roadster, and that it should retain its stunning lines whether the roof is in its raised or lowered position. So successfully has this been achieved that when the roof is stowed Vantage Roadster looks like it was never designed to be anything else. The dramatically angled windscreen joins with the car’s high waistline to create a proportionally perfect thoroughbred sports car profile.
The roof stows seamlessly behind the seats with no need for a bulky and heavy tonneau cover while the bootlid deck slopes gently downwards until it meets the dramatic upkick of the distinctive rear spoiler. The widened stance introduced on the coupe is retained on Roadster, as is the increased aperture of the signature Aston Martin grille; an object lesson in how to combine beauty with function, with the large grille increasing air flow the powerful engine by almost 30 per cent.
With a spectacular canvas to create a sporting masterpiece, three new paint colours – Iridescent Sapphire, Satin Iridescent Sapphire and Bronze Flare have been added to the paint palette, while the Vantage Roadster’s roof can be specified in Black, Red, Blue or Black and Silver. To enhance the cars sporting character further still, a selection of painted liveries can also be applied in a choice of 21 complementary colours. There are four 21” wheel styles, available in a range of finishes, behind which can be seen one of seven different colour choices of brake calipers.
Marek Reichman, Aston Martin Chief Creative Officer, said: “This new Vantage Roadster is a sculptural masterpiece. The resonant roar of its engine brings its simple yet refined surface design to life, creating a connection that’s impossible to ignore. Its form exudes beauty, its athletic stance conveys predatory intent, and its sound delivers a visceral, sensory experience. Created as both art and performance, the engine’s sound amplifies this balance, turning the auditory experience into an essential part of the journey. With the roof down, the soundscape becomes as dynamic as the design, blending simplicity, power, and a visceral connection that transcends driving into an unmatched sensory experience.”
Like all Aston Martin models, Vantage customers can explore endless bespoke and customisation possibilities via the Q by Aston Martin personalisation service. Enlisting the skills of Q’s designers and crafts people, customers take an unforgettable personal commissioning journey that can encompass everything from a single small distinguishing detail to full-scale engineering and production of entirely bespoke components to create a true one-off.

Vantage Roadster, like its Coupe counterpart, is the latest model to feature Aston Martin’s next-generation infotainment. Created in-house and first introduced on DB12, it is entirely bespoke and developed in-house from scratch. The system combines a fully integrated multi-screen system with full online connectivity, featuring 10.25” Pure Black touchscreen technology with full capacitive single and multi-finger gesture control. Touchscreen commands remain balanced with the tactility of physical switches, with buttons retained for the key mechanical operations of gear selection, drive selection, heating and ventilation. There are also control switches for Chassis, ESP and Exhaust, Active Safety System settings and Park Distance Control, ensuring the most used controls can be operated intuitively and without the need to take your eyes off the road. Supplemented by a new Aston Martin customer connectivity app which supports iOS and Android devices, it allows interaction, control and feedback to and from the customer’s Vantage via their personal device.
Vantage Roaster is fitted as standard with the Aston Martin 390w 11 speaker audio system. Developed utilising advanced hardware, this system features a Surround sound mode with QuantumLogic® surround sound processing for an immersive soundscape. However, if a musical soundtrack to the drive is deemed truly significant, some customers will delight in the optional system developed with Aston Martin’s audio partner, Bowers & Wilkins. Acoustically engineered to the Vantage Roadster’s interior volume and shape, this exceptional system uses technologies and innovations found in Bowers & Wilkins’ acclaimed world-class loudspeakers.
Vantage Roadster deliveries will commence in Q2 2025. It joins its Coupe sibling, the DB12 and DB12 Volante, the stunning new Vanquish and, of course the Supercar of SUVs, DBX707 as well as the forthcoming Valhalla supercar to form unquestionably the most capable, comprehensive and desirable product line up in the 112-year history of the Aston Martin marque.
Automotive
KIA ON HOW THE PV5 IS REDEFINING COMMERCIAL MOBILITY ACROSS THE GCC
Exclusive interview with Mr. Ahmed VP, KIA
The PV5 marks an important milestone in Kia’s Platform Beyond Vehicle (PBV) strategy. How do you see purpose-built electric vehicles transforming industries such as logistics, last-mile delivery, smart cities and urban mobility across the GCC?
Generic vehicles were fulfilling the needs of logistics and last-mile delivery for the longest time, though not efficient in various aspects, whether performance, space or safety. Purpose-built vehicles has changed this equation entirely by addressing these longstanding shortcomings with precision.
PV5, for example, comes with flexibility, next-generation technology, and practicality to address niche requirements such as commercial, leisure or lifestyle use with specific configurations – the PV5 Passenger, PV5 Cargo, PV5 Wheelchair Accessible Vehicle (WAV), PV5 Taxi, and PV5 Prime Edition. Each of these vehicles benefit from a comprehensive suite of advanced driver assistance systems like telematics, real-time diagnostics, vehicle monitoring and much more, enhancing their suitability for professional fleet applications.
Electrification is becoming a major industry transition globally. How do you view the pace of EV adoption across the UAE and wider GCC region, and what role will Kia’s EV portfolio play in shaping the company’s long-term regional strategy?
The UAE and the wider GCC has already earned the recognition of being among the world’s fastest-growing EV markets, with the UAE ranking first in Middle East EV sales for the second consecutive year. What is equally significant is the qualitative shift accompanying this growth: range anxiety and battery lifecycle concerns, once the most persistently cited barriers to EV adoption, are receding rapidly, thanks to the UAE’s expanding charging network, which now encompasses more than 2,000 stations across the country.
For Kia, electrification will remain key as we expand our EV portfolio. We already have EV9, EV6, EV5, EV3 and PV5; and, this year, we will be rolling out EV9 GT, EV6 GT, and E4, showing that we’re not slowing our EV ambitions. These vehicles are a further extension of our electrification efforts to address business needs.
Many automotive brands today are repositioning themselves as mobility and technology companies rather than traditional car manufacturers. How does Kia view its own long-term identity within this broader transformation of the automotive industry?
For Kia, our identity as a Sustainable Mobility Solutions Provider is a declaration we made deliberately at our brand relaunch in 2021, before much of the industry had begun to seriously articulate a comparable vision. Electric vehicles, hybrids, autonomous driving, PBVs and smart connectivity are products and platforms in active deployment, outlined in our Plan S strategy, which has provided the architectural framework for Kia’s evolution from a traditional automotive manufacturer to a modern, sustainable mobility solutions provider.
The PV5 has been developed as Kia’s first dedicated PBV. What were the key customer needs or market trends that influenced its design and development?
The development of the PV5 was shaped by a convergence of structural market forces. The rapid growth of last-mile delivery to networks, shared mobility needs, the demand for more sophisticated, connected fleets, and even the growing mobility-as-a-service (MaaS) economy have collectively redefined what a commercial vehicle must deliver. What became clear in this process is that no single configuration can adequately address the breadth and specificity of these demands, and that genuine versatility in mobility solutions requires sector-level engineering.
For example, to support People of Determination passengers, we developed Kia PV5 Wheelchair Accessible Vehicle (WAV), which has dedicated wheelchair features, and optimised passenger area. Critically, it is produced as a fully integrated OEM solution, i.e. the accessibility features are engineered into the vehicle’s architecture with structural integrity, occupant safety, and long-term user experience.
Charging infrastructure continues to develop across the region. How does the PV5’s charging capability and battery offering support the practical needs of commercial operators?
The PV5 supports both AC and DC charging solutions, including DC fast charging capability which gets the vehicle charged from 10% to 80% in just approximately 30 minutes, a figure that translates into reduced downtime and higher vehicle availability. Certain variants, such as the PV5 Cargo, are available with configurations designed to meet different operational requirements, including a long-range 71.2 kWh battery offering a WLTP range of up to 416 kilometres. That range profile is comfortably capable of sustaining intensive urban deployment cycles without requiring mid-shift recharging, addressing what has been the primary commercial hesitation around fleet electrification: that EVs cannot reliably meet the demands of professional use. The PV5 is engineered to answer that concern directly, and the GCC’s expanding charging infrastructure only strengthens the case further.
Automotive
The Next Generation of Automotive Retail Starts with Connected Data
As customer expectations evolve and digital technologies reshape the automotive landscape, dealerships are moving beyond one-off vehicle sales towards connected, data-driven customer relationships.

In this exclusive interview with Monzer Tohme, Managing Director, MEA & APAC, Keyloop explores how unified platforms, AI, and customer intelligence are redefining the future of automotive retail across the Middle East.
What is the fundamental change happening beneath the surface that most people are still underestimating within the automotive retail space?
The shift from selling cars to selling continuous experiences, and the data layer that makes it possible.
The change most people miss is this: automotive retail is quietly moving from a transactional model to a data-driven relationship model. Every interaction a customer has, a service visit, a finance inquiry, a test drive generates a signal. For decades, those signals were lost. Today, the dealers and OEMs who are winning are the ones connecting those signals into a single customer intelligence layer.
What’s underestimated is the compounding effect of that data. It’s not just about personalisation or marketing. It’s about predicting the next need before the customer voices it, whether that’s a service upsell, a renewal, or a new vehicle. The dealers who build that capability now will have a structural advantage that’s very hard to close later.
We often hear about digital transformation in automotive retail. In reality, what does that mean for a dealer on the ground here in the UAE?
It means removing the friction between the customer’s expectation and the dealer’s ability to deliver in real time, at every touchpoint.
UAE customers are among the most digitally sophisticated in the world. They research online, compare across brands, and expect a seamless handoff when they walk into a showroom. So for a dealer on the ground, digital transformation is not a back-office project. It is the front line of the customer experience.
In practical terms, it means a sales executive knowing a customer’s full history before the conversation starts. It means a service advisor being able to book, update, and close a job card without paper. It means the dealer principal seeing their whole business, inventory, pipeline, aftersales revenue, on a single screen, not ten spreadsheets. At Keyloop, that is exactly what we are enabling: systems that make the dealer faster, smarter, and more connected to their customer than they have ever been.
We have a sales-driven dealership model here. Do you think we will soon move towards a lifecycle or ownership-driven model?
Yes, and the smarter dealers in this region are already making that move. The question is not if, but how fast.
The traditional Gulf dealership model was built on volume, conquest, and the next sale. That worked when customers had fewer choices and lower expectations. Today, with more brands, more channels, and more informed buyers, holding on to a customer through the entire ownership journey, service, insurance, accessories, finance, trade-in, next vehicle, is far more valuable than winning them once and losing them to a competitor two years later.
The region also has some natural tailwinds. Vehicle ownership periods here are longer than many markets. Loyalty programmes are becoming more sophisticated. And OEMs are starting to push dealers toward customer lifetime value metrics, not just unit sales. The dealers who will lead the next decade are the ones who start treating the delivery of a car not as the end of the sale, but as the beginning of a relationship.
At Keyloop, our entire platform philosophy is built around that lifecycle view, giving dealers the tools to stay relevant and valuable to their customers long after the keys are handed over.
Fusion is positioned as an end-to-end platform. What was broken in the traditional dealership tech stack that required this kind of unified approach?
The old stack wasn’t one broken thing, it was five or six disconnected systems that were never designed to talk to each other.
If you walked into most dealerships in this region five years ago, you would find a DMS handling stock and invoicing, a separate CRM for sales leads, another tool for workshop job cards, a standalone finance and insurance module, and often a completely manual process for parts ordering. Each system had its own database, its own logic, its own version of the customer record. The result was that a dealer could sell a car, service it three times, and still not know the customer’s name when they called in.
◈ Fragmented customer identity: Sales, service, and finance held separate customer records with no unified view across departments.
◈ Data trapped in silos: Actionable insights sat locked inside individual systems, reporting required manual consolidation, often in spreadsheets.
◈ eInvoicing introduction: Every new tool added another point-to-point integration to maintain, creating fragility and escalating IT costs over time.
◈ Slow, error-prone workflows: Re-keying data between systems introduced errors and added minutes to every customer interaction, multiplied across thousands of transactions.
Keyloop Fusion was built to eliminate that entire class of problem. When sales, aftersales, parts, finance, and CRM all run on a single data model, the customer record becomes the source of truth that every team works from. A service advisor can see the customer’s purchase history. A sales executive can see their service loyalty. The dealer principal can see the whole business in one place. That is not a feature, it is a fundamentally different architecture that changes how a dealership operates.
For the Middle East specifically, this matters even more. Our dealership groups here are large, multi-brand, multi-site operations. The complexity they carry is enormous. A unified platform is not a nice-to-have for them, it is the only way they can scale without proportionally scaling their headcount and risk.
What kind of partnerships or ecosystem play is Keyloop looking to build here in the Middle East in 2026–2027?
We are building an open ecosystem, not a walled garden. The partnerships we are focused on fall into four areas that directly amplify what dealers and OEMs in this region need most.
Digital retail & mobility platforms: Connecting to regional marketplace and mobility platforms so dealers can manage online inventory, leads, and digital retailing from inside Fusion without channel switching.
AI and data intelligence partners: Working with analytics and AI providers to layer intelligence on top of Fusion’s data, predictive service reminders, demand forecasting, and customer churn signals.
OEM & manufacturer integration: Deeper real-time connectivity with OEMs on warranty claims, vehicle data, and campaign management, reducing friction between the factory and the showroom floor.
Financial services & insurance: Embedding regional finance and insurance providers, including multiple finance options, natively into the sales workflow, so F&I becomes seamless rather than a separate conversation.
Beyond technology, we are also investing in our implementation and consulting partner network in the region. The Middle East has some of the most ambitious dealership groups in the world. Groups that operate across the GCC, into Africa, and into South Asia. Supporting their scale requires a strong local partner ecosystem, not just a product.
The strategic intent is clear: Keyloop becomes the platform that other automotive technology companies want to connect to, not the system that sits in isolation. We want to be the operating system of the dealership, with a marketplace of capabilities around it. That is the direction for 2026 and into 2027, and the Middle East is a priority market for proving that model out.
Automotive
THE GCC IS SHAPING DEPLOYMENT OF MOBILITY TECHNOLOGY AT SCALE

By Rabih Haydar, Director of Partnerships EMEA, Autotech Ventures
Innovation is abundant across the global mobility landscape, but successful large-scale deployments are rare. Many markets remain stuck in pilot mode, testing promising technologies without the regulatory alignment, infrastructure readiness, or political will to move beyond experimentation. This is where the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and other members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) stand apart. Here, mobility tech are not confined to trials or press releases; they are being rolled out across cities, transport networks, and logistics corridors with real users and real impact. The region isn’t just talking the talk; it also walks the walk.
The GCC’s governments have made mobility a strategic priority, tying it directly to economic diversification, sustainability, and competitiveness. This enables faster decision-making and coordinated execution. Additionally, large-scale urban developments and national transport strategies provide the canvas to deploy technologies from end to end, rather than in isolation. For example, Dubai’s Smart Self-Driving Transport Strategy has set a target of having 25 percent of all trips autonomous by 2030, while Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 aims to have 15 percent of public transport vehicles autonomous by that year. As a result, the GCC is shifting the global mobility narrative. Instead of focusing solely on where technology is invented, it calls attention to where it is implemented, integrated, and scaled decisively.
Governments as platform builders
In mobility, impact is not defined by how advanced a technology is, but by how widely and reliably it is deployed. Only by successfully transitioning from experimentation to execution can a mobility project unlock real outcomes: reduced congestion, lower emissions, improved logistics efficiency, and better quality of life. By focusing on scale, the region is accelerating learning cycles, driving costs down, and creating real-world operating environments that technologies simply cannot replicate in small pilots.
What truly differentiates the GCC in mobility deployment is the role governments play, not merely as regulators, but as platform builders. Across the region, national and city-level authorities are setting clear long-term mobility agendas and backing them with capital, infrastructure, and execution capacity. This infrastructure‑first approach means that charging networks, digital platforms, dedicated lanes, ports, and logistics zones are often built ahead of demand, dramatically reducing friction for deployment.
Equally important is regulatory intent. Rather than reacting to new technologies, policymakers are designing frameworks that anticipate them, using sandboxes, pilot-to-scale pathways, and public procurement to accelerate adoption. Governments also act as anchor customers, creating immediate demand for solutions in public transport, logistics, and urban services. Many startups struggle to secure these elsewhere.
This level of coordination allows mobility tech to be deployed system-wide instead of in isolation. The result is faster commercialization, clearer unit economics, and generation of real operational data at scale. In an industry where fragmentation often slows progress, the Middle East’s government-led platform model is emerging as a powerful catalyst for execution.
Global Technologies, Local Scale
The GCC is successfully deploying global mobility tech at scale, from electric vehicles (EVs) and autonomous vehicles to drone logistics, while making room for competition to elevate the ecosystem.
Across the region, EV penetration doubled from roughly 2 percent to 4 percent between 2024 and 2025, making it among the world’s fastest-growing EV markets. The UAE leads the region with EV penetration of around 6 percent, while Saudi Arabia committed around $50 billion to EVs by 2030, including its homegrown EV brand, Ceer Motors. Chinese OEMs such as BYD, Geely, and MG have also rapidly captured market share in the region, rising from around 2 percent in 2019 to 15 percent in 2025. This influx of competitively priced, high-tech Chinese EVs, often adopting battery innovations and integrated software ecosystems, has accelerated regional electrification.
In Abu Dhabi, WeRide and Uber launched the Middle East’s first fully driverless Robotaxi service in November 2025, backed by the world’s first city-level permit for Level 4 autonomy. Operations are expanding to cover 70 percent of the city, with plans to deploy 1,200 robotaxis across Abu Dhabi, Dubai, and Riyadh by 2027.
Innovation in drone logistics is also abundant in the GCC. UAE urban and industrial pilots are using drones to transport parcels, documents, and even medium-range cargo via VTOL drones with capacities up to 250 kg, supported by unified airspace platforms.
Where Deployment Becomes Advantage
Taken together, the GCC’s approach to mobility is creating a new center of gravity for the industry, defined by execution at scale. For founders, the region is a unique place where technologies can move quickly from pilot to real-world deployment, supported by infrastructure, regulation, and committed demand. This shortens the path to validation, revenue, and global relevance.
For investors, the opportunity lies in engaging early in markets where scale is not a future aspiration but a design principle. Companies that can prove they can perform in the GCC’s complex, high-demand environments are more likely to be competitive globally. And for policymakers, the challenge and the opportunity both lie in sustaining this momentum by continuing to enable open ecosystems, talent inflow, and cross-border scalability.
The future of mobility will not be shaped solely in labs or boardrooms, but in the city’s roads, where technology is deployed decisively and system-wide. Through the large-scale rollout of these technologies, driven by government infrastructure, regulatory foresight, and private-sector innovation, the GCC is going beyond just adopting global mobility tech and is now shaping it.
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