Canoo tested its electric delivery vans for Walmart without airbags despite employees raising red flags, sources say

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Two years ago, startup Canoo lent a handful of its egg-shaped electric delivery vans to Walmart for their first tests. There was a lot riding on the outcome.

Walmart had signed a non-binding agreement to buy 4,500 of the sci-fi vans. If Walmart went through with the deal, it would help the fledgling, financially-strapped Canoo become a real competitor in the EV industry.

But Canoo employees and technicians working on the project quickly started raising red flags about the vans to each other and Canoo executives, according to four people with knowledge of the matter, including one person who drove the vans during testing. The vehicles that were used to make deliveries on public roads in the Walmart pilot, they said, lacked a critical, legally-required component: airbags.

“They were really early, hand-built prototypes,” says one Canoo employee who test drove the vehicles. “You got to get airbags.... And that hadn't been done,” the person said.

Asked for comment about the lack of airbags during the initial testing, a Canoo spokesman said that “it is common practice for test vehicles to have certain services not turned on during the test phase.”

The lack of airbags is just one of many missteps over the years at Canoo, a company that generated initial buzz with its promise to shake up the delivery van market by creating an electric-powered alternative. It had seemingly hoped to take on a similar high-profile push akin to that of Amazon and upstart electric vehicle maker Rivian, which had been working together for years.

But so far, Canoo has failed to deliver vehicles to customers in large numbers. And some employees using corporate credit cards say they have had their purchases denied and received calls from collection agencies over supplies that were allegedly never paid for. At least four suppliers and a communications agency have sued the company for allegedly failing to pay what it owes. Three of those lawsuits have since been settled or withdrawn.

This article is based on interviews with four former Canoo employees. None of them agreed to speak on the record because they feared legal retaliation by Canoo.

Canoo was founded in 2017 by a group of auto industry veterans who wanted to build an affordable electric vehicle for young professionals. The idea was to build a “skateboard” chassis that could be used as the base for everything from a camper van to a delivery vehicle.

In 2020, before shipping any cars, the company went public at a $2.4 billion valuation through a SPAC, an alternative to a more traditional initial public offering that doesn’t require as rigorous financial disclosures as an initial public offering.