Professor Amnon Shashua and Pat Gelsinger celebrate after ringing the opening bell for Mobileye Global Inc., in New York City
Professor Amnon Shashua, senior vice president at Intel Corporation and president and chief executive officer of Mobileye, and Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger celebrate after ringing the opening bell for Mobileye Global Inc., the self-driving unit of chip maker Intel Corp, at the Nasdaq MarketSite, at Times Square in New York City, U. Reuters

Volkswagen plans to expand its cooperation with Intel's Mobileye to include its automated driving program after Wednesday's decision to no longer invest in self-driving startup Argo AI, two sources familiar with the plan told Reuters on Thursday.

Mobileye, which develops autonomous driving technologies, already cooperates with VW's software unit Cariad.

"If you have obtained good results with one partner, it makes sense to work with them in other fields as well," said one of the sources.

Volkswagen declined to comment.

Volkswagen's and Ford Motor's exit from Argo came after three years of joint efforts on the development of automated driving systems and investments of more than $3 billion, highlighting the cost pressure automakers face in that field.

While Ford took a $2.7 billion non-cash pre-tax impairment on Argo, VW might have to write down more than one billion euros ($1.00 billion), a source familiar with the company said.

Israel-based Mobileye went public this week, being valued at more than $20 billion. Chief Communications Officer Dan Galves said earlier this week that based on its design wins with automakers, the company's assisted driving systems would be deployed in 270 million cars by 2030.

($1 = 0.9965 euros)

A Volkswagen logo is seen on one of the German automaker's cars in a street in Sydney, Australia
A Volkswagen logo is seen on one of the German automaker's cars in a street in Sydney, Australia, October 8, 2015. Reuters
Mobileye driverless technology at the Nasdaq Market site in New York
Mobileye driverless car logo is seen on a vehicle at the Nasdaq Market site in New York, U.S., July 20, 2021. Reuters