Edmonton Journal

Buyers want more safety features — not self-driving cars: survey

- LORRAINE SOMMERFELD

Once you work past the big noise around autonomous vehicles, what is it that consumers actually want?

According to a recent Consumer Reports survey, it’s not autonomous features, but safety ones. Headlines might lead you to believe it’s all about the autopilot, but instead, it’s all about the rear-view cameras.

The top two innovation­s that consumers want on their new or used vehicles are those cameras (51 per cent) and blind-spot warning indicators (45 per cent).

The survey unearthed some unsurprisi­ng findings: people still want to drive their own cars, and still believe they can do it better than technology that is still in the proving stages.

An industry consultant cited in the survey results noted owners can get easily disenchant­ed with false positive warnings, saying “There’s definitely a case to be made that systems that are supposed to assist but don’t do it consistent­ly and quickly become more of an annoyance than anything else.”

Which means there is a little chicken-or-the-egg thing going on. We don’t trust what we don’t know, but we can’t adopt it if we won’t try it.

For those two top technologi­es buyers do trust, that trust is well founded. The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety notes that “blind-spot warning can reduce crashes by 14 per cent, and rearview cameras can reduce crashes by 17 per cent.”

Technology and the car industry may be changing at ever increasing speeds, but consumers will always vote with their wallets. And for now, that means they want increased vision around their vehicles — and their hands on the wheel.

 ?? RUSSELL PURCELL ?? A recent survey found people see value in backup cameras and blind-spot warning systems.
RUSSELL PURCELL A recent survey found people see value in backup cameras and blind-spot warning systems.

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