Deutsche Welle (English edition)

US regulators probe deadly Tesla crash in Texas

Two people were killed when the car crashed into a tree and burst into flames. Police suspect the Tesla Model S was operating on autopilot when the fatal accident occurred.

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US federal agencies on Monday began an investigat­ion into a fatal car crash that killed two people outside Houston, Texas, over the weekend.

Local police say the accident occurred when a 2019 Tesla Model S, traveling on a residentia­l road at high speed, missed a curve, struck a tree and burst into flames.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion ( NHTSA) and the National Transporta­tion Safety Board (NTSB) have "launched a Special Crash Investigat­ion team to investigat­e the crash. We are actively engaged with local law enforcemen­t and Tesla to learn more about the details of the crash and will take appropriat­e steps when we have more informatio­n," according to an NHTSA statement.

Local authoritie­s say Harris County firefighte­rs used more than 100,000 liters (26,417 gallons) of water to extinguish the fire as the battery repeatedly flared up after the flames were put out.

It was then that police discovered one occupant in the passenger seat and another in the backseat — with no one in the driver's seat. That fact led police to assume that the car was traveling in autopilot mode at the time of the crash.

Authoritie­s '100% sure' no one was driving

On Monday, Harris County

Constable Mark Herman said that investigat­ors are "100% sure" that no one was driving the electric car when it crashed, though it remains uncertain if the vehicle was in "driver assist" mode or "full self-driving" mode.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk praised the company's driving software in a tweet just hours before the crash occurred, writing, "Tesla with autopilot engaged now approachin­g 10 times lower chance of accident than average vehicle."

However, US authoritie­s are currently investigat­ing a number of crashes, some fatal, in which autopilot was being used.

Kelly Funkhouser of the nonprofit consumer advocacy outfit Consumer Reports says Tesla has been providing inaccurate numbers about its safety record for years, adding: "You just have to take their word for it" when it comes to vehicle performanc­e.

A slew of investigat­ions into fatal crashes involving Teslas

The NHTSA has also come in for its share of criticism regarding the oversight of autonomous driving systems, most recently from the NTSB. It complained that its approach was "misguided because it essentiall­y relies on waiting for problems to occur rather than addressing safety issues proactivel­y," noting that the NHTSA had "taken a non-regulatory approach to automated vehicle safety."

As of last month, the NTSB said it had opened 27 special investigat­ions into crashes involving Tesla automobile­s. The agency says 23 of those investigat­ions remain ongoing and that three have been opened recently. The agency says officials investigat­ing this weekend's crash will focus "on the vehicle's operation and the postcrash fire."

Tesla stocks dropped 3.7% on Monday.

 ??  ?? Tesla CEO Elon Musk says his cars are safe, consumer advocates and safety investigat­ors are not as confident
Tesla CEO Elon Musk says his cars are safe, consumer advocates and safety investigat­ors are not as confident

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