Global Times - Weekend

US TO OVERHAUL RULES FOR SELF-DRIVING CARS

Head of transporta­tion department promises regulation­s will encourage industry innovation

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US President Donald Trump’s administra­tion will unveil revised selfdrivin­g guidelines within the next few months, the head of the US Transporta­tion Department said Monday, responding to automakers’ calls for regulation­s that will eliminate barriers and allow autonomous vehicles on the road.

“The pressure is mounting for the federal government to do something” about autonomous vehicles, US Transporta­tion Secretary Elaine Chao said Monday in Detroit.

However, Chao told reporters the federal government should be careful before setting binding rules to govern autonomous vehicles.

“We don’t want rules that impede future technologi­cal advances,” Chao said.

Chao was not specific about what her department’s proposals would include, or how they would differ from policy guidance proposed by the Obama administra­tion.

Companies including Alphabet Inc’s self-driving car Waymo unit, General Motors Co, Ford Motor Co, Uber Technologi­es Inc, Tesla Inc and other are aggressive­ly pursuing automated vehicle technologi­es.

“We need a more concrete regulatory framework,” Ken Washington, chief technology officer of Ford, said in Detroit. Automakers could use a clear set of rules to certify on their own that an autonomous vehicle is safe, as they can now with convention­al vehicles, Washington said.

Ford Executive Chairman Bill Ford Jr said at a forum in Washington he feels “quite confident” that the hardware and software will be ready by 2021 for selfdrivin­g cars. But other big issues loom. “Things like ethics,” Ford said. Individual automakers cannot program separate ethics software for self-driving cars but must work together as an industry, Ford said.

Ron Medford, Waymo’s director of safety, said in Detroit he expected autonomous cars would appear first in “managed fleet operations,” not as vehicles sold to individual­s.

Chao, in remarks prepared for delivery in Detroit, said the new rules would support industry innovation and aim to encourage “new entrants and ideas that deliver safer vehicles.”

Automakers have met with Chao on several occasions in recent months and urged her to make changes to Obama-era automated vehicle rules.

Republican­s on the House Energy and Commerce Committee have also been working on a package of legislatio­n to make it easier to get self-driving cars on the road. A US Senate committee is also planning a new hearing in June on self-driving cars.

The Obama guidelines called on automakers to voluntaril­y submit details of self-driving vehicle systems to regulators in a 15-point “safety assessment” and urge states to defer to the federal government on most vehicle regulation­s.

Automakers have raised numerous concerns about the guidance, including the fact that it requires them to turn over significan­t data, which could delay testing by months and lead to states making the voluntary guidelines mandatory.

 ?? Photo: IC ?? A NuTonomy Inc self-driving car undertakes a road test in Boston, the US, in January.
Photo: IC A NuTonomy Inc self-driving car undertakes a road test in Boston, the US, in January.

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