Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Cubic Telecom raises $40m as investors back driverless cars

Funding will allow mobile tech company to expand as its value hits $200m

- Fearghal O’Connor

MOBILE-TECHNOLOGY firm Cubic Telecom is set to announce that it has raised as much as $40m (€35m) in a new funding round.

The five-year-old Dublin-based company, which its chief executive, Barry Napier, has said is now valued at $200m, is developing network and software systems that allow cars to communicat­e reliably with networks.

The innovative technology is seen as crucial to the safe operation of autonomous vehicles — or driverless cars — because it ensures that their connection to the network is constant. Privately-held Cubic has previously raised $37.1m in funding from car manufactur­er Audi, the chip manufactur­er Qualcomm and Sierra Wireless, among others.

But the new funding round, which is set to be completed within weeks, will double that and allow the Irish company to expand.

“I’ve raised just shy of $40m so far and I’ ll announce another $40m in the next three weeks,” said Napier at a recent event.

When contacted, the company confirmed that it was “currently in the process of completing another funding round for the entire Cubic business” but added that it could not comment on the details of this investment.

Napier said that less than five years after the business was founded it was now valued at $200m.

Cubic announced plans last year to almost double its workforce in Sandyford, Dublin to 140. Its client base includes some of the biggest names in the technology, auto and telecommun­ications sectors, including Microsoft, Qualcomm, Vodafone, AT&T, Volkswagen and Audi.

Cubic’s system means car manufactur­ers do not have to rely on many different mobile networks for connectivi­ty.

“The big challenge for us was to get into the auto-manufactur­ing market,” said Napier. “They are metal press companies that are 100 or 120 years old.

“You’ve a kid from Dublin, walking in with a load of te- chies, saying, ‘We can solve all of your issues’. So we’ve had a massive challenge.”

A major breakthrou­gh came in 2014 when Cubic completed a deal with Elon Musk that saw its system being used in all 7,500 Tesla vehicles sold in China. It has also carried out as much as 150,000km of cross-border testing with Volkswagen and Audi vehicles.

Napier predicted that it would be a decade before autonomous vehicles were widely available but said the likes of Uber, GoCar or MyTaxi could be using them within five to seven years, depending on government regulation.

IS Ireland starting to get self-driving cars through the back door? Last week, Audi launched the fourth generation of its luxury model, the A8. Alongside the usual fancy upgrades, the car has what Audi says is “level-three” autonomy.

“This means you can take your hands off the steering wheel and the car does the rest,” said Dietmar Voggenreit­er, Audi’s global head of sales and marketing.

So does this mean we can now get into the car in the morning, tell it where to go and lie back for a snooze? Not quite.

As many readers will know, there are five self-driving ‘levels’ that cars fall into. Level one is the most basic assistance mechanisms, such as cruise control.

Level two encompasse­s cumulative driverless features, such as emergency braking and ‘lane assist’, where the car can steer itself back from crossing a motorway lane.

Level three, where Audi is positionin­g itself now, is where things start to get much more automated.

Here, the car can make advanced decisions based on monitoring traffic and conditions around it. In theory, a level-three car can drive for an extended period with no hands on the steering wheel or a foot on any pedal.

However, level-three vehicles are not considered to be fully capable of dealing with complex traffic scenarios and revert back to manual control at very short notice when an issue occurs.

For this reason, some car manufactur­ers are skipping this level to go straight to level four.

Here, the driver is still present, but will not be expected to intervene, even in a problem situation. In other words, the car can drive itself. To this end, many level-fours are not expected to have steering wheels or pedals.

Level five is the absolute driverless car, with the vehicle capable of doing anything on the road without any human interactio­n. This is where cities quickly become dominated by fleets of continuous self-driving vehicles that act as a new wave of transporta­tion for people.

Audi is hardly alone in pushing autonomy as a new feature in its latest high-end cars. Tesla says it will have level-four vehicles on the road by the end of next year. Ford says that its level-four cars will be available by 2021.

Given how imminent this is, there are some huge legal, regulatory and financial issues that may have to be dealt with sooner rather than later.

Right now, Irish law doesn’t recognise any form of automation as an acceptable assistant to a driver. If you drive without your hands on the steering wheel, a garda can caution you for dangerous driving, regardless of the car’s automation.

In a worst-case scenario involving a serious accident, it isn’t yet any defence to claim that the driver left the car’s computer in control.

Similarly, insurance companies here have not yet modelled policies that cater for self-driving cars. This step may not be far off, however. Earlier this year, the UK government set out guidelines for how liability on self-driving vehicles will be settled, placing most responsibi­lity on insurers. With the availabili­ty of cars like the A8 now hitting the roads, insurance companies may start to look at adapting their policies.

In theory, insurance on driverless cars should be cheaper than for manually-operated vehicles. This is based on the idea that when computers are in charge, there are less accidents. In the US, there seems to be some early evidence of this.

Crashes involving Tesla vehicles have fallen by 40pc since the company introduced its ‘Autopilot’ function, a ‘level-two’ feature. Less crashes means less payouts. That should mean lower premiums. Tesla certainly sees it this way, seizing an opportunit­y in some markets to sell its own insurance at the time of the car purchase.

What might be interestin­g is whether insurers seek to move ahead of regulatory authoritie­s in Ireland. Will an Audi or a Tesla driver soon qualify for cheaper insurance based on the insurer’s estimate that this driver is likely to use some of the car’s in-built automation (and hence have fewer crashes)?

There are still some basic things about self-driving cars that the public will need time to come to terms with.

While such vehicles will probably reduce injuries and fatalities on the roads, there will be tragedies.

In particular, there will be times when a car’s onboard computer will be required to choose between bad results.

An example might be when a child on a bicycle races out in front of a car and the only avoidance option is to drive into a tree, possibly killing the car’s driver or passengers. Which does the car choose?

Does that choice change if one of the car’s passengers is a child?

There are also those who simply dislike the idea of self-driving cars. Other than sectors that stand to lose out on business, such as lawyers in insurance or injury cases, there is arguably a generation­al divide.

Older men, in particular, associate driving a car with control and freedom.

Younger generation­s care much less: there has been a 28pc fall in driving test applicatio­ns in the UK over the last decade. Millennial­s, and the generation that comes after them, look set to prize many other things higher than control of a vehicle.

Autonomous cars, vans, buses and trucks could represent the single biggest technologi­cal change that ordinary Irish people see over the next 10 years.

The benefits could be huge. Obviously, crashes are expected to fall. Insurance premiums might, too.

On a wider level, it could see the reversal of what Kerry TD Michael Healy-Rae has called the destructio­n of rural socialisin­g because of drink-driving laws (in a fully self-driving car, it doesn’t matter if you’ve had five pints).

It could also result in what Audi has described as the “25th hour”, extra time to focus on work or leisure things because you don’t have to drive your vehicle.

But whether we welcome it or dread it, driverless cars are coming. Audi’s A8 is just the first step.

 ??  ?? The latest Audi A8 features technology that allows it a degree of autonomy
The latest Audi A8 features technology that allows it a degree of autonomy
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