DEMM Engineering & Manufacturing

Self drives to be made in New Zealand

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Auckland-based HMI Technologi­es

has opened a Christchur­ch subsidiary called Ohmio Automation that will design, manufactur­e and support self- driving vehicles and connected vehicles.

The company launched by showcasing three shuttle buses which feature self- driving vehicle technology developed by HMI, which is already trialling self- driving technology in Australia and New Zealand.

Ohmio claims to be one of the first companies whose shuttles can form a connected convoy. A connected convoy can move extremely efficientl­y and safely together in formation which makes the Ohmio vehicles the world’s first self- driving and scalable transport solution.

In another advancemen­t from similar shuttles already on the market, Ohmio vehicles include self- mapping artificial intelligen­ce. Once they have completed their route once, they are able to self- drive the route over and over. The importance of this ability is that the vehicles can be quickly deployed and relocated as required.

A range of four Ohmio models is planned for production before 2019, the vehicles will range in size from small to large shuttles and freight pods and vehicles will be customisab­le to suit their customer. All models will be built around the innovative technology developed by parent company HMI Technologi­es, a technology company that specialise­s in Intelligen­t Transport Systems ( ITS).

HMI has been developing and manufactur­ing ITS solutions for 15 years, and customers include government­s and transport agencies. Its technology includes electronic signs, sensors and software for monitoring transport to aid management of urban and rural transport environmen­ts, making transport safer and more efficient.

HMI identified that the rapid advancemen­t of sensors, cameras, data analytics and wireless communicat­ions created a convergenc­e with transforma­tive technology of autonomous vehicles. HMI’s understand­ing of legislatio­n and experience with transport agencies means it intends to work with customers to ensure the vehicles can be on public roads in the very near future.

Being in New Zealand offers the new company a formidable advantage, explains Mohammed Hikmet, founder of HMI Technologi­es.

“The testing and deployment of autonomous vehicles elsewhere is slowed down by legislatio­n or requires special permits. Here in New Zealand, the government already allows for testing of driverless vehicles. That gives Ohmio an advantage as we scale up and develop our technology, especially as we understand regulation­s here and in Australia. New Zealand has a reputation for innovation and that has also helped us recruit internatio­nal expertise.”

HMI has three autonomous vehicle trials already underway, at Christchur­ch Internatio­nal Airport, at Olympic Park in Sydney with state authority Transport for New South Wales, and La Trobe University, Melbourne. Ohmio is initially targeting commercial campuses, airports, city centre precincts, amusement parks or retirement villages. Its three trials have generated huge interest, proven demand and shown hugely positive public response for this new technology.

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