Khaleej Times

Uber grounds fleet of self-driving cars after accident

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Washington — Uber has grounded its fleet of self-driving cars pending an investigat­ion into the crash of an Uber autonomous vehicle in Arizona, a spokespers­on for the car-hailing service said Sunday.

No one was seriously injured in the accident which occurred Friday in Tempe, Arizona while the vehicle — a Volvo SUV — was in self-driving mode, the company said. “We are continuing to look into this incident and can confirm we had no backseat passengers in the vehicle,” the Uber spokespers­on said.

The accident occurred when the other vehicle “failed to yield” while making a left turn, Tempe police spokeswoma­n Josie Montenegro­s said.

“The vehicles collided causing the autonomous vehicle to roll onto it’s side. There were no serious injuries,” she said.

Self-driving Uber vehicles always have a driver who can take over the controls at any time.

Montenegro said it was uncertain whether the Uber driver was controllin­g the vehicle at the time of the collision.

The company grounded its selfdrivin­g vehicles in Arizona after the accident, and then followed up on Saturday pulling them off the road in Pittsburg and San Francisco, the two other locations where it operates self-driving vehicles, the company said.

The car-hailing service has been dented by a series of bad news stories, including disclosure­s about a culture of sexism, cut-throat workplace tactics and covert use of law enforcemen­t-evading software.

We are continuing to look into this incident and can confirm we had no backseat passengers in the vehicle

Uber spokespers­on

A number of executives have left the company in recent weeks, including president Jeff Jones, as troubles have mounted.

Advocates of self-driving cars say that they can cut down on deadly traffic accidents by eliminatin­g human error.

But there have been accidents, including a fatality in Florida in May when a truck struck a speeding Tesla that was on autopilot.

An investigat­ion found no safety-related defects with the autopilot system, but concluded that the driver may have had time to avert the crash if he had been paying closer attention. — AFP

 ?? Reuters ?? A self-driven Volvo SUV, owned and operated by Uber Technologi­es, is flipped on its side after a collision in Tempe, Arizona. —
Reuters A self-driven Volvo SUV, owned and operated by Uber Technologi­es, is flipped on its side after a collision in Tempe, Arizona. —

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