Soroush Salehian
Analyst · New Street Research. Please go ahead
Thank you, Andrew, and good afternoon everyone. We are off to a strong start in 2022 and continue to execute on our plan. In Q1, we achieved key milestones that moved us towards Aeries II deployment and continue to broaden our commercial reach. I'm excited to highlight a few of our accomplishments which are summarized on Slide 5. First, we are on track for first deliveries of Aeries II in late Q2. Initial units have been manufactured with initial system and performance validation successfully completed. Second, we are building strong momentum in Industrial Automation. We continue to make progress on our first industrial precision product with Nikon, while also receiving significant inbound interest for additional industrial automation sensing applications, which are uniquely achievable with Aeva's FMCW LiDAR on chip technology due to superior precision. Third, a number of developments will enable us to accelerate adoption of our unique 4D LiDAR technology. This includes being the first and only FMCW LiDAR on NVIDIA's DRIVE autonomous vehicle platform. We also continued to strengthen our team across the board, including new leadership and sales to help accelerate our go-to-market plans. Together with this, we also announced the opening of Aeva's China office as we look to increase our global presence and response to the growing market demand for 4D LiDAR across as wide variety of perception applications. And fourth, the $415 million in cash at the end of Q1, reflect our disciplined approach to capital allocation and continues to position Aeva well to execute on our plan to bring 4D LiDAR to mass scale. Moving to Slide 7, I would like to provide more color on key business development over the past quarter. First on Aeries II, we completed a number of important milestones in Q1 that move us meaningfully closer to our target to start delivery to customers in late Q2. This includes bringing the system manufacturing line-on-line with initial unit manufactured. We successfully completed the initial system and performance validation and initial reliability test on Aeries II surpassed Aeries I, including for temperature and ingress protection. The market reception following the unveiling of Aeries II has been very encouraging. We continue to see growing consensus among automotive and non-auto customers that FMCW 4D LiDAR with a differentiated ability to instantly measure non-inferior velocity, enables us faster detection at higher confidence levels to safely bring higher levels of autonomy to a variety of perception applications including automotive and industrial markets. Aeries II incorporates the world's first 4D LiDAR on-chip solution that delivers direct velocity measurement for every pixel, together with 500 meters of range, camera level resolution and a designed for automotive grade and reliability. As we expand on our commercial engagements and begin deliveries of Aeries II units. We expect to meet the demand for our core perception platform, leveraging our LiDAR on-chip module as well as the Aeries II product. In terms of the work that remains ahead, we are focused on the bring up of the automated assembly for our LiDAR on-chip module over the next few months and preparation for our scale deployments and to meet the strong demand for Aeries II. Moving to Slide 9, as we announced earlier Aeva is now the first and only FMCW 4D LiDAR on NVIDIA's DRIVE platform, which we believe will help to continue expanding our momentum in automotive. NVIDIA DRIVE is an interim platform that enables OEMs and automotive players to develop and validate safe self-driving technology at scale. Based on our engagements with OEMs, they are increasingly looking to implement FMCW LiDAR into their next-generation programs. Aeva's integration on the NVIDIA DRIVE platform brings our unique 4D perception to a broader group of automotive customers. And with OEM's ability to build their autonomy stack using existing and NVIDIA development and software tools, we believe this will enable OEM to accelerate the adoption of Aeva's FMCW technology. Now switching gears to non-automotive on Slide 10. We are proud to have NASA use Aeva's 4D LiDAR to create a mobile terrain mapping and navigation system to support the next generation of Lunar and planetary exploration. This system will help astronauts and rovers to navigate and map the lunar surface, leveraging our proprietary capabilities that uniquely solve critical challenges on the moon. One of those key challenges in navigation and a GPS-free environment, because Aeva's FMCW technology can directly measure instant velocity for every pixel. It can also estimate its own motion, effectively serving as an independent navigation solution that provides precise positioning, even in environments where GPS is unavailable or unreliable, such as in tunnels or parking garages for automated vehicles, or in the case, on the surface of the moon, where it's completely unavailable. In addition, Aeva's FMCW technology is immune to optical interference, which is particularly needed on the surface of the moon where the sun never appears more than three degrees above the horizon in certain regions, such as the lunar South pole. This exposed cameras and legacy LiDAR sensors is significant optical interference that prevents their effective use for sensing and perception. This region of the moon also had areas that are permanently shadowed or have long persistence shadows that prohibit photogrammetry-based navigation. Aeva's immunity to optical interference from the sun and ability to operate in the dark will allow astronaut and rovers to safely explore and map the lunar surface anytime day or night. These are also critical capabilities for enabling the next generation of autonomous vehicles, which need to operate safely during period of optical interference with the sun directly shedding out of the sensors. We have always believed in the potential for our FMCW on-chip technology to be a platform that can enable the next wave of perception for a wide range of applications beyond automotive. Central to our technology is a common core LiDAR chip module that is the same architecture we use in the Aeries platform for automotive. But tune to deliver different performance requirements for different use cases. And NASA provides a glimpse of the broad use cases and a significant opportunity for Aeva's perception platform. Let's move to Slide 11, which highlights our progress in industrial automation, where there is growing demand across a wide range of application to utilize our LiDAR on chip module. In particular, our ability to achieve high-precision and a small chip module form factor unlock a number of unique new opportunities, such as applications requiring precise measurement of a centimeter or less, which to our knowledge, cannot be achieved with current 3D time of flight LiDAR solutions. To meet this growing demand and enable faster adoption, we are developing a common platform for industrial automation, based on the same LiDAR on-chip architecture used for automotive applications. And building off of the micron level precision already achieved last year, we are making good progress and target completing our LiDAR on chip module development for industrial automation by Q4 of this year. This timeline also aligns with our collaboration with Nikon where we remain on track for our first product launch in 2024. Our planned common platform for industrial automation is an example of how our strategic decision announced last quarter to accelerate our shift from NRE towards scale deployment of common platforms for commercial programs, is enabling us to pursue opportunities with a higher level of efficiency and agility. Now to our key objectives for 2022, which are highlighted on Slide 13. We have made good progress so far this year, and believe we are well positioned to achieve our key objectives for 2022. I would like to share a bit more on each one. First on Aeries II Deployment and Qualification with Customers as mentioned earlier, we continue our focus on manufacturing and supply chain, which includes the bring up of automated assembly equipment for our LiDAR on chip module, in order to keep us on schedule for deliveries to begin in late Q2. And given the strong demand for Aeries II, we are laser focused on our preparation to achieve this milestone. Second, on converting two additional programs towards production, we continue to progress on a number of engagements for multiple applications, including passenger vehicle, trucking and mobility, as well as non-automotive such as industrial automation. We believe we are on track to win program in both automotive and non-automotive this year. And see opportunity to further expand our commercial momentum as we begin Aeries II and LiDAR chip module deployment. Third, on accelerating the release of our first non-automotive application, we continue to progress on our first industrial precision product with Nikon and remain confident in achieving our accelerated 2024 timeline for production launch. Beyond that, inbound interest continues to grow and we are developing a common perception platform that utilizes our core LiDAR on chip module to meet demand and accelerate adoption in the growing industrial automation market and fourth, on preparing the supply chain and processes for commercial deployments. We continue to work closely with our supply chain partners to prepare for commercial deployment. Efforts also continue on working toward certification in Automotive SPICE and information security. And with that, I will turn the call over to Saurabh to discuss the financials.