Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Where self-driving cars are headed

- AP Glen De Vos Chief tecnology officer Delphi Technologi­es PLC Interviewe­d by Dee-Ann Durbin. Answers edited for clarity and length.

Delphi has long been active in the fast-growing autonomous vehicle market. Its spinoff of Aptiv may speed things up even more. Delphi Technologi­es PLC, which itself was spun off by General Motors Co. in 1999, will continue to make car parts, including gasoline and electric engines. Aptiv PLC, which Delphi spun off this month, will focus on self-driving vehicles and the software and hardware needed to run them. Chief Technology Officer Glen De Vos says Aptiv split so it can be more nimble and pursue different relationsh­ips. Aptiv wants to supply automated driving systems to automakers, fleet operators and even cities that can use them on buses or shuttles. In Singapore, where it’s operating automated taxis with backup drivers, it intends to have a fully self-driving taxi by 2020 or 2021. The company also wants to retain control of some of the data that the systems collect so it can constantly improve and update them and make money by selling the data. “We have to be part of that broader ecosystem that’s using the car as a digital platform as opposed to just supplying components that go into it,” De Vos told reporters at a recent event at Aptiv’s U.S. headquarte­rs near Detroit. Here are more of De Vos’s comments.

You have so many partners, like BMW and Intel. Why should Aptiv control the data?

In some cases you do share. Absolutely. But ultimately we want to be controllin­g how that sharing is done. What gives us a position of control, if you will, is having the automated driving system, the thing that actually makes the car work. If you own that and you control that, you’re in a much better position to control and influence everything around it.

How will automated driving change the car market?

There’s not a unanimity of opinion about what will happen to sales as automation comes onto the market. But in general, however you do the math, your car is a horribly underutili­zed asset. Automation brings in the ability to drive up more efficient utilizatio­n of that capital asset. Now, that in turn says, I need a lot less cars. At the same time, I burn through them a lot faster, because the life of a car is miles dependent, not time dependent. So there’s been a lot of analysis showing that I’m going to need a lot more cars. It also may force more commoditiz­ation of the car itself.

When will we first see Aptiv systems operating on a larger scale?

We’re going to engage with cities — Boston, Singapore, Las Vegas, some others —to help operationa­lize micro transit or public transporta­tion services because it gets the platform on the road, you get cycles of learning, you can actually commercial­ize quickly. But the broader market is going to be the private ride-hailing services so we need to participat­e in that market as well.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States