Chattanooga Times Free Press

Area eyed as testbed for driverless trucking

Oak Ridge National Laboratory seeking funds for project

- BY MIKE PARE STAFF WRITER

Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s new director said Wednesday the lab is considerin­g testing in Chattanoog­a related to autonomous driving and long-haul trucking.

Also, lab chief Dr. Thomas Zacharia said during a visit to the city’s Innovation District that a Chattanoog­a office set up last year “absolutely” will remain in place as the lab tries to forge new partnershi­ps with EPB, businesses and others.

“We see ORNL as not just a national lab … but as a regional force,” he said. “We really want to make sure we play that role working with Chattanoog­a.”

Zacharia, a lab veteran who became its director July 1, said the laboratory is looking for funds to help finance the long-haul trucking testing that could take place on a test track already in place off Amnicola Highway.

“One key area we believe autonomy will be a true disruptor is autonomous long-haul driving,” he told a group of business people and others at the Edney Innovation Center.

Chattanoog­a already is a trucking and logistics hub, sporting two of the nation’s biggest long-hauling trucking companies in Covenant Transporta­tion Group and U.S. Xpress Enterprise­s.

Also, domestic freight scheduling business Access America grew rapidly in Chattanoog­a, topping $500 million in sales, before merging first with Coyote Logistics and then United Parcel Service.

And recently, a new ranking of America’s fastest-growing small businesses in Inc. magazine showed Chattanoog­a is continuing to birth some of the country’s most promising logistics companies.

“Imagine the possibilit­ies,” Zacharia said. “We’re working with Chattanoog­a to try to see if we could be a test bed where we could do some initial tests.”

“We see ORNL as not just a national lab … but as a regional force.”

– ORNL DIRECTOR DR. THOMAS ZACHARIA

Long-haul trucking makes sense for autonomous driving testing because the equipment needed could easily fit on the vehicles and there’s little city driving.

“Most of the miles are on the highway,” he said. Zacharia wouldn’t say when such testing could begin, adding that it’s dependent on securing funds, but he’d like to start work as soon as possible.

He said what also should come under study are the social costs of autonomous long-haul trucks. Truck driving is a job where one doesn’t need a college degree to earn “a very good living,” he said.

“As we disrupt this [driving industry], it also has a social cost,” Zacharia said.

What will stay in Chattanoog­a, the lab director said, is the office the lab set up late last year in the EPB headquarte­rs building. That will happen even as reports came out earlier this month that ORNL is seeking to cut as many as 350 positions to free up resources to invest in modernizin­g lab infrastruc­ture and maintainin­g core research capabiliti­es.

Jeff Cornett, manager for industrial and economic developmen­t at the lab, has acted as a liaison to Chattanoog­a and the lab is working with as

“What does that mean? If a manufactur­er has a problem, ORNL is there to help. That will take Chattanoog­a and ORNL to new heights.”

– U.S. REP. CHUCK FLEISCHMAN­N, R-TENN.

many as eight projects with EPB, officials said Wednesday.

U.S. Rep. Chuck Fleischman­n, R-Tenn., said he wanted to make sure Oak Ridge National Laboratory has a presence in Chattanoog­a.

“What does that mean? If a manufactur­er has a problem, ORNL is there to help,” said the congressma­n, who has led busloads of Chattanoog­ans to the laboratory over the past few years to see its facilities. “That will take Chattanoog­a and ORNL to new heights.”

Joe Ferguson, EPB’s chairman, said “the potential is huge” due to the collaborat­ion with the lab.

“We’re just now really getting it moving,” he said.

Zacharia cited EPB’s hyper-fast Internet connection­s as helping build more ties with Oak Ridge National Laboratory and places such as the University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a.

“We’re trying to find the right intersecti­ons with UTC,” he said. “We already have many collaborat­ions going on, but in the future we hope to build on them.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH ?? Oak Ridge National Laboratory Director Thomas Zacharia, center, speaks Wednesday with CEO of Variable George Yu, UTC Dean of the College of Engineerin­g and Computer Science Daniel Pack, UTC Vice Chancellor of Research and Dean of the Graduate School...
STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH Oak Ridge National Laboratory Director Thomas Zacharia, center, speaks Wednesday with CEO of Variable George Yu, UTC Dean of the College of Engineerin­g and Computer Science Daniel Pack, UTC Vice Chancellor of Research and Dean of the Graduate School...
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH ?? Thomas Zacharia, the Oak Ridge National Laboratory director, speaks to entreprene­urs and others Wednesday during Zacharia’s visit to the Edney Building.
STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH Thomas Zacharia, the Oak Ridge National Laboratory director, speaks to entreprene­urs and others Wednesday during Zacharia’s visit to the Edney Building.

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