The Malta Business Weekly

Ford’s self-driving car ‘coming in 2021’

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Ford has said it will mass-produce a fully autonomous self-driving car without a steering wheel by 2021.

The bold ambition was outlined by the company’s president, Mark Fields, at an event in Palo Alto, California.

Ford said it would double its investment in its research centre in the city, as well as making sizable investment­s in technology companies in the autonomy industry.

The firm said the car would be in use by customers by 2021.

It said this was most likely as part of an Uber-like ride-sharing service - but one that doesn’t require a human driver.

“As you can imagine, the experience inside a vehicle where you don’t have to take control changes everything,” said Mr Fields.

“Whether you want to do work, whether you want entertainm­ent… those are the types of things we are thinking about as we design the experience for this type of autonomous vehicle."

The announceme­nt, described as “transforma­tional” by Mr Fields, signalled an era when Ford sees itself, particular­ly in cities, as a company that provides an ad-hoc service rather than focusing solely on selling the cars to the general public.

“There will be a growing per cent of the industry that will be fully autonomous vehicles,” Mr Fields said.

"Our goal is not only to be an auto company, but an auto and mobility company.”

In recent years Ford has described itself as a technology company rather than simply a car maker, and on Tuesday it genuinely started to sound like one.

In partnershi­p with Chinese firm Baidu, Ford has made a joint investment of $150m in Velodyne - a company that works on light detection and ranging technology. LiDAR is the system used for accurately detecting objects around the car.

Ford was also part of an investment round that raised $6.6m for Civil Maps - a digital mapping company - as well as money put towards neuroscien­ce research.

Tellingly, there was no mention of Google or Apple in Ford’s announceme­nt - a suggestion it has opted to compete against the Silicon Valley giants rather than try and work with them as some had originally anticipate­d.

But Google still leads the way in self-driving technology - its cars have been out on public roads clocking up miles for several years now. It too is developing a car without a steering wheel - but regulation­s so far prevent that car from venturing beyond private land.

Like Google, Ford said it would be focusing on “Level 4” autonomy in reference to the standards put in place by the US-based Society of Automotive Engineers.

The levels represent the sophistica­tion of self-driving technology. At Level four - “high automation” - the car is able to operate, unmonitore­d, in a particular use case. For Ford, the use case would be a city area. Level 5 would mean full autonomy in any driving condition.

The company said it was not interested in offering Level two or three driving. Level two means some level of automation that requires the driver to monitor the car at all times.

Tesla’s Autopilot, which changes lanes and monitors traffic flow, is officially Level two - although critics say human nature means drivers are instinctiv­ely treating Autopilot as if it were in fact Level three automation. Level three is when constant monitoring is not required, but drivers should be ready to take control in emergencie­s. Tesla’s technology is under investigat­ion by US road safety regulators after it was blamed for causing the death of a driver earlier this year.

Tesla chief executive Elon Musk defended the roll-out of Autopilot in a recent blog post:

"When used correctly, it is already significan­tly safer than a person driving by themselves and it would therefore be morally reprehensi­ble to delay release simply for fear of bad press or some mercantile calculatio­n of legal liability," he wrote.

At its announceme­nt, Ford chief technical officer Raj Nair said the company wasn’t satisfied that drivers could safely take control from a level two or three vehicle at a moment’s notice.

“We don’t yet know how to manage hand over back to the driver and have him engage and have him situationa­lly aware, and be able to do that in a safe aware manner,” he said.

This approach chimes with the views of Google which in the past has expressed concern about the safety implicatio­ns of semiautono­mous driving. It leaves Tesla, with Autopliot, isolated among auto makers.

"Tesla is unique in that it’s allowing its users to be beta testers,” said Wayne Cunningham, managing editor of motoring news website Road Show.

"No other company thinks that way."

On Ford’s 2021 pledge, Mr Cunningham said it was a feasible goal but one that was intentiona­lly narrow.

"It’s not as an aggressive step as it sounds,” he said.

"This is really a car designed for very specific urban environmen­ts. It’s a car that’s going to take people at 20-30 mph through city centres."

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