Oman Daily Observer

S’pore trials driverless taxis in world first

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SINGAPORE: A small group of residents in Singapore can now hail self-driving taxis with their smartphone­s, in the world’s first public trial of autonomous driving technology.

While billed as a pioneering trial, the service covers a relatively small area and its riders will be handpicked. Invited members of the public can summon a car from a fleet of six reconfigur­ed Renault Zoes and Mitsubishi i-MiEVs to ferry them within a 200-hectare research and high-tech business park. An engineer from the company will ride in vehicles to monitor performanc­e and take the wheel if required, according to a release from Singapore-based startup nuTonomy. NuTonomy runs one of several autonomous driving projects in the island nation, which is promoting the technology as part of efforts to reduce a reliance on privately owned cars. Public transit operator SMRT Corp set up a joint venture in April with a Netherland­s-based company to operate “driverless pods.” A centre for testing and research of autonomous vehicles was set up this month by the land transport authority and one of its universiti­es.

“The technology is maturing to a point where commercial services are becoming possible once you’re able to prove the reliabilit­y and safety,” said Doug Parker, Chief Operating Officer of nuTonomy. “I would say it’ll happen sooner rather than later,” with fully autonomous Muscat ------------------------------------------------- 5,838.01 Abu Dhabi-------------------------------------------- 4,519.83 Dubai --------------------------------------------------- 3,492.22 Qatar -------------------------------------------------- 11,134.81 Kuwait ------------------------------------------------- 5,428.91 Bahrain ------------------------------------------------ 1,152.69 Saudi --------------------------------------------------- 5,941.07 cars that run without safety drivers possible in five years, he said.

Self-driving taxis came into focus after Uber Technologi­es Inc said it will soon allow customers in downtown Pittsburgh to summon autonomous cars with their phones. Like nuTonomy’s trial, that fleet of specially modified Volvo XC90 SUVs will be supervised by humans in the driver’s seat.

Data from the experiment will feed into the roll-out of driverless taxis across the city-state in 2018, said nuTonomy, a US-based tech start-up that developed the software used in the vehicles.

“The trial represents an extraordin­ary opportunit­y to collect feedback from riders in a real-world setting,” said nuTonomy Chief Executive and Co-founder Karl Iagnemma. “This feedback will give nuTonomy a unique advantage as we work toward deployment of a self-driving vehicle fleet in 2018,” he said.

NuTonomy, which has raised about $20 million from mostly US investors, doesn’t have plans for an initial public offering for now, Parker said. The company plans to attract investors from other countries in future rounds of financing and expand the research and developmen­t team. The company is in talks with three other countries in Asia, as well as some cities in the US and the UK, about holding similar autonomous driving trials, Parker said, declining to name the locations.

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