Khaleej Times

Battle to get cars ‘talking’ to each other heats up

- John Lippert and Todd Shields

chicago — Toyota Motor laid out plans to start putting short-range communicat­ions chips in US vehicles in the next three years, staking out its position in a battle to make cars safer by getting them to “talk” with one another.

The third-best selling automaker in America will put the chips in Toyota and Lexus models in the US starting in 2021, said Andrew Coetzee, group vice-president of product planning for North America. The technology will enable cars to send data on their location and speed to surroundin­g vehicles and roadside infrastruc­ture to curb crashes.

By making the plan public, Toyota is escalating a campaign to get the rest of the auto industry — and regulators — to embrace the technology. It’s also headed for a clash with phone companies that would rather see carmakers embrace 5G cellular networks to accomplish the same task, and with tech giants and cable providers that are angling for access to the same airwaves.

The dedicated short-range communicat­ions systems Toyota will start using, known as DSRC, send informatio­n back and forth to one another several times a second and can alert drivers to potential collisions before they happen. A broad coalition of auto companies, including Toyota and General Motors, urged US Transporta­tion Secretary Elaine Chao in November to support a “talking cars” mandate for all new passenger vehicles by 2023.

“We need to make a technology choice when there’s no regulatory requiremen­t in place,” John Kenney, director of networking research at the Toyota InfoTechno­logy Centre in Mountain View, California, said by phone.

“What we’re doing today is speaking up and saying ‘We will deploy DSRC technology and we encourage other automakers to do the same.’”

 ?? Bloomberg ?? A coalition of auto companies, including Toyota and General Motors, urged the US in November to support a ‘talking cars’ mandate for all new passenger vehicles by 2023. —
Bloomberg A coalition of auto companies, including Toyota and General Motors, urged the US in November to support a ‘talking cars’ mandate for all new passenger vehicles by 2023. —

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