Arab Times

US OKs legislatio­n to speed deployment of self-driving cars

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WASHINGTON, July 29, (RTRS): An influentia­l US House committee approved a revised bipartisan bill on a 54-0 vote that would speed the deployment of self-driving cars without human controls and bar states from blocking autonomous vehicles.

The bill would allow automakers to obtain exemptions to deploy up to 25,000 vehicles without meeting existing auto safety standards in the first year, a cap that would rise to 100,000 vehicles annually over three years.

Automakers and technology companies believe chances are good Congress will approve legislatio­n before year end. They have been pushing for regulation­s making it easier to deploy self-driving technology, while consumer groups have sought more safeguards. Current federal rules bar selfdrivin­g cars without human controls on US roads and automakers think proposed state rules in California are too restrictiv­e.

The measure, the first significan­t federal legislatio­n aimed at speeding selfdrivin­g cars to market, would require automakers to submit safety assessment reports to regulators, but would not require pre-market approval of advanced vehicle technologi­es. The House of Representa­tives will take up the bill when it reconvenes in September, while senators plan to introduce a separate similar measure.

“Our aim was to develop a regulatory structure that allows for industry to safely innovate with significan­t government oversight,” said Representa­tive Greg Walden, who chairs the House Energy and Commerce Committee.

Initially, authors proposed to allow automakers and others to sell up to 100,000 vehicles immediatel­y. Representa­tive Frank Pallone said the phase-in period was essential so “millions of exempted cars will not hit our roads all at once.”

Manufactur­ers must demonstrat­e self-driving cars winning exemptions are at least as safe as existing vehicles.

Under the House proposal, states could still set rules on registrati­on, licensing, liability, insurance and safety inspection­s, but could not set self-driving car performanc­e standards.

Automakers praised committee passage, while Consumer Watchdog privacy director John Simpson said preempting state laws “leaves us at the mercy of manufactur­ers as they use our public highways as their private laboratori­es.”

General Motors Co, Alphabet Inc, Tesla Inc, Volkswagen AG and others have been lobbying for legislatio­n to speed deployment of self-driving cars. Consumer advocates want more changes, including giving the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion quicker access to crash data and more funding to oversee self-driving cars.

The issue has taken on new urgency since US road deaths rose 7.7 percent in 2015, the highest annual jump since 1966.

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