Skip to main content

Volvo, Google, and Mercedes-Benz will accept liability in self-driving car accidents

Mercedes S Class Autonomous Tech
Mercedes-Benz S Class Autonomous Vehicle Image used with permission by copyright holder
There are more than a few hurdles automakers must overcome before regulators will approve the road operation of autonomous/self-driving vehicles. Beyond the technology and engineering obstacles, establishing laws to govern how, where, and when these auto piloted models may roam our highways and byways is no easy task.

A pair of automakers and one technology giant are now attempting to fast-track at least one part of the regulatory process: liability for an autonomous vehicle accident. Volvo, Google, and Mercedes-Benz have now all said that they will accept full liability if their self-driving vehicles cause a collision.

Volvo’s CEO, Håkan Samuelsson, will announce the decision when he speaks in Washington D.C. on Thursday. He will also describe the process of getting these types of vehicles to market. “The U.S. risks losing its leading position due to the lack of federal guidelines for the testing and certification of autonomous vehicles,” Samuelsson said. “Europe has suffered to some extent by having a patchwork of rules and regulations. It would be a shame if the U.S. took a similar path.”

60 Minutes is reporting that both Google and Mercedes-Benz have claimed they would also accept responsibility for collisions caused by their cars, mostly because both companies expect few if any accidents will ever happen.

Presently, four U.S. states allow autonomous-vehicle testing on public roads: California, Nevada, Florida and Michigan. The NHTSA is currently working on how to set standards that will be consistent across the states, and it previously issued an advanced notice of upcoming laws and regulations to mandate vehicle-to-vehicle communication.

There will no doubt be stages of self-driving vehicle adoption within the market, and some initial parameters may include designated roads, times of day, and manual overrides for models equipped with these technologies.

Expect more automakers to jump on board by accepting liability in autonomous accidents to speed the regulatory process along.

Editors' Recommendations

Miles Branman
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Miles Branman doesn't need sustenance; he needs cars. While the gearhead gene wasn't strong in his own family, Miles…
How a big blue van from 1986 paved the way for self-driving cars
Lineup of all 5 Navlab autonomous vehicles.

In 1986, a blue Chevy van often cruised around the streets of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania near Carnegie Mellon University. To the casual observer, nothing about it appeared out of the ordinary. Most people would pass by it without noticing the camcorder peeking out from its roof, or the fact that there were no hands on the steering wheel.

But if any passerby had stopped to inspect the van and peer into its interior, they would have realized it was no ordinary car. This was the world's first self-driving automobile: A pioneering work of computer science and engineering somehow built in a world where fax machines were still the predominant way to send documents, and most phones still had cords. But despite being stuck in an era where technology hadn't caught up to humanity's imagination quite yet, the van -- and the researchers crammed into it -- helped to lay the groundwork for all the Teslas, Waymos, and self-driving Uber prototypes cruising around our streets in 2022.

Read more
We now know what the self-driving Apple Car might look like
A render that shows what the Apple Car might look like.

Thanks to several 3D concept renders, we now know what the future self-driving Apple Car might look like.

Vanarama, a British car-leasing company, took inspiration from other Apple products, as well as Apple patents, in order to accurately picture the rumored Apple car.

Read more
Tesla pulls latest Full Self-Driving beta less than a day after release
The view from a Tesla vehicle.

False collision warnings and other issues have prompted Tesla to pull the latest version of its Full Self-Driving (FSD) beta less than a day after rolling it out for some vehicle owners.

Tesla decided to temporarily roll back to version 10.2 of FSD on Sunday following reports from some drivers of false collision warnings, sudden braking without any apparent reason, and the disappearance of the Autosteer option, among other issues.

Read more