The Asian Age

JLR tests its first driverless vehicle on public roads

- COSTAS PITAS

Britain’s biggest automaker, Jaguar Land Rover ( JLR), has tested its first driverless car on public roads, it said on Friday, as carmakers race against each other and tech firms to tap into new technologi­es.

Last October, a pod heavily adapted from a compact Renault car was the first autonomous car to take to Britain’s streets as part of government­backed trials aimed at seeing more widespread use of such vehicles by 2020.

Politician­s are trying to make it as easy as possible to test new driving technologi­es in Britain, seeking to build an industry to serve a worldwide market expected to be worth around £ 900 billion by 2025. An Automated and Electric Vehicles Bill is currently being debated in parliament to set out how new technologi­es will operate in Britain.

JLR hopes the testing will allow it to understand more about how self- driving vehicles interact with other cars and road infrastruc­ture such as traffic lights and how models can replicate human behaviour whilst driving.

“By using inputs from multiple sensors, and finding intelligen­t ways to process this data, we are gaining accurate technical insight to pioneer the automotive applicatio­n of these technologi­es,” said Nick Rogers, the firm’s executive director for product engineerin­g.

The testing is taking place in the central English city of Coventry, where JLR is headquarte­red. Trials will continue into next year. Major automakers are seeking to head off the challenge not just from each other but also from technology firms such as Alphabet Inc’s Waymo, which is also developing autonomous vehicles. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India