Skip to main content

Change the rules so we can test more self-driving cars, automakers tell feds

Hyundai Ioniq autonomous concept
Image used with permission by copyright holder
The current autonomous car testing rules are holding back progress. Lifting tight restrictions on the number of allowed self-driving vehicles is imperative to move the much-needed technology ahead. That is the essence of the message that will be presented on Tuesday to a U.S. House panel, according to Reuters.

Currently, only 2,500 vehicles in a 12-month period can be exempt from U.S. Transportation Department National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) rules. Senators on both sides of the aisle are working to provide relief to automakers who wish to test autonomous vehicles on U.S. roads. Michigan Democrat Senator Gary Peters and Republican Senator John Thune, the chair of the Commerce Committee, released a statement of support. The senators are looking into legislation change that “clears hurdles and advances innovation in self-driving vehicle technology.”

GM vice president of global strategy Mike Abelson pre-released his testimony to the panel Monday. “Without changes to those regulations, it may be years before the promise of today’s technology can be realized and thousands of preventable deaths that could have been avoided will happen,” Abelson said. “It is imperative that manufacturers have the ability to test these vehicles in greater numbers.”

In another early testimony release, Toyota Research Institute chief executive Gill Pratt stated, “It is important that the federal government begin looking beyond testing to deployment of these systems to address the handful of standards that are inconsistent with or incompatible with autonomous vehicle technology.”

A Lyft public policy executive is prepared to tell the panel his company has a goal to operate a driverless pilot in a major U.S. city this year, while an exec from Volvo Car Group plans to tell the House panel that under current regulations Volvo isn’t committing to U.S. tests of its “Drive Me” pilot already running in Sweden.

Bruce Brown
Digital Trends Contributing Editor Bruce Brown is a member of the Smart Homes and Commerce teams. Bruce uses smart devices…
Watch San Franciscans take a ride in Waymo’s self-driving car
Waymo Jaguar I-Pace

Waymo is inviting San Francisco residents to hop inside its self-driving vehicles for a drive around the city.

Welcoming our first riders in San Francisco

Read more
Tesla issues stark warning to drivers using its Full Self-Driving mode
A Telsa Model 3 drives along a road.

Tesla in recent days rolled out a long-awaited update to its Full Self-Driving (FSD) mode that gives its vehicles a slew of driver-assist features.

But in a stark warning to owners who’ve forked out for the premium FSD feature, Tesla said that the software is still in beta and therefore “may do the wrong thing at the worst time.” It insisted that drivers should keep their "hands on the wheel and pay extra attention to the road.”

Read more
The future of transportation: Self-driving cars? Try self-driving everything
GM electric flying taxi

Technology is reshaping every aspect of our lives. Once a week in The Future Of, we examine innovations in important fields, from farming to transportation, and what they will mean in the years and decades to come. 

Stroll around any CES (virtual or otherwise) in the last decade and it’s impossible to miss all the feels the tech industry has for transportation, self-driving cars in particular. Every major technology company has its fingers in cars, from the infotainment systems powered by Google and Apple to the operating systems driven by Blackberry and Linux to the components and circuits that make up the car itself, built by Qualcomm and Nvidia and NXP and a dozen more. (And don't get me started about this Apple Car nonsense.)

Read more