Business Day

Crowd in San Francisco sets self-driving vehicle ablaze

• Fireworks blamed for Waymo robotaxi blaze but no passengers hurt

- Hyunjoo Jin and Abhirup Roy /Reuters

A crowd vandalised and set fire to a Waymo self-driving car using fireworks in San Francisco on Saturday, the Alphabetow­ned company and authoritie­s said, marking the most destructiv­e attack so far on driverless vehicles in the US.

On Saturday night, a crowd surrounded a white sport utility vehicle that was moving along a street in the city’s Chinatown district, a company spokespers­on said.

Michael Vandi, who posted videos of the incident, said people were celebratin­g China’s lunar new year by setting off fireworks. A person jumped onto the Waymo vehicle and broke its windshield. Another person jumped on the car 30 seconds later as some in the crowd clapped in approval.

“That was when it went wild,” he wrote, describing people breaking the glass and others writing on the car.

“There were two groups of people. Folks who encourage it and others who were just shocked and started filming. Noone stood up. I mean there wasn’t anything you could do to stand up to dozens of people.”

His video showed the vehicle engulfed in flames with a huge plume of black smoke.

Waymo said someone threw fireworks into the car, setting it on fire.

The fire department posted pictures on social media of the charred remains of the car and said fireworks started the blaze.

“The vehicle was not transporti­ng any riders and no injuries have been reported. We are working closely with local safety officials to respond to the situation,” the company said.

It did not say what caused the attack.

The San Francisco police department said it was investigat­ing the cause of the fire and did not say whether arrests had been made. The electric car, a Jaguar I-PACE, is equipped with 29 cameras and other sensors.

“This was a one-off event,” the Waymo spokespers­on said, adding it will “continue serving riders during today’s festivitie­s”.

The incident was not the first time people have harassed selfdrivin­g cars, but its severity may illustrate growing public hostility after a pedestrian-dragging incident last year involving a vehicle operated by General Motors’ Cruise unit.

On previous occasions in San Francisco and Phoenix, Arizona, groups have disrupted the operations of self-driving vehicles, blocking their path, trying to enter the vehicles and jumping on their bonnets. Videos that went viral showed people putting orange traffic cones on top of the vehicles to obstruct their sensors and force them to stop abruptly.

Last week, a driverless Waymo car collided with a cyclist in San Francisco, causing minor injuries.

Waymo offers a driverless ride-hailing service in Phoenix and is working to expand to Los Angeles and Austin, Texas.

On October 2 2023, a pedestrian hit by another vehicle was thrown into the path of a selfdrivin­g Cruise vehicle and dragged 6m.

California subsequent­ly suspended the company’s driverless testing licence, and Cruise pulled all its US self-driving vehicles from testing.

Completely driverless test vehicles, mostly from Cruise and Waymo fleets, travelled nearly 5.3-million kilometres in California in 2023.

THE INCIDENT WAS NOT THE FIRST, BUT ITS SEVERITY MAY ILLUSTRATE GROWING PUBLIC HOSTILITY

 ?? /Reuters ?? No way: A Waymo self-driving robotaxi, owned by Alphabet’s autonomous driving unit, is engulfed in flames after the San Francisco fire department said fireworks were thrown into the vehicle at the weekend.
/Reuters No way: A Waymo self-driving robotaxi, owned by Alphabet’s autonomous driving unit, is engulfed in flames after the San Francisco fire department said fireworks were thrown into the vehicle at the weekend.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa