Uber’s Advanced Technologies Group unveiled its latest self-driving car, a Volvo SUV that’s designed to be fully driverless.

The self-driving Volvo XC90 SUV, announced at the Uber Elevate Summit on Wednesday, will be the first Uber autonomous car designed to drive itself without the need for a human “mission specialist” driver behind the wheel, TechCrunch reports. The vehicle was made as part of Uber’s ongoing partnership with Volvo.

The car’s self-driving system can enable “the possible future deployment of self-driving cars in Uber’s network as an autonomous ridesharing service,” Uber said in its news release. The vehicle will be equipped with computer-controlled steering and breaking systems, as well as back-up systems and back-up battery power. The back-up systems will bring the car to a full stop if any of the primary systems were to fail.

“What it looks like from the outside isn’t much different, but what’s going on inside enables us to run our full autonomy system – things like 360 degrees of camera coverage, 360 degrees of Lidar and radar,” Uber ATG CEO Eric Meyhofer said at the Elevate Summit. “These give the vehicle everything it needs in order to operate autonomously.”

Uber says that this new generation of self-driving cars will be introduced to Uber's existing on-road fleet "in higher quantities" in 2020.

However, Uber's self-driving cars are currently only being tested on public roads in Pittsburgh. Uber's testing program was suspended in early 2018 following a deadly accident in Arizona involving one of its self-driving cars.

Volvo and Uber have partnered since September 2016 on self-driving technology. Volvo signed a "framework agreement" in 2017 to sell Uber "tens of thousands" of self-driving cars between 2019 and 2021.