Los Angeles Times

Ford beats Tesla in race to develop driverless cars

Four traditiona­l automakers top study ranking 18 companies on their progress.

- By Russ Mitchell russ.mitchell@latimes.com

SAN FRANCISCO — Tesla topped Ford Motor in stock market value this week, but a new study claims that Tesla is eating Ford’s dust in the race toward driverless cars.

Uber is puttering way back of the pack, according to the study’s rankings.

The study by Navigant Consulting, a Chicago firm with deep roots in the auto industry, ranked 18 companies that are developing a “full stack” of hardware and software for completely autonomous cars, casting subjective judgments on their progress and prospects. judgments on their progress and prospects.

Four traditiona­l auto companies ended up on top: Ford, General Motors, Renault-Nissan and Daimler.

The three California companies on the list — Tesla, Uber and Google’s Waymo — lagged behind for various reasons.

“In raw technology, Waymo in particular, they’re on the cutting edge of this technology,” said Sam Abuelsamid, senior research analyst at Navigant. “But we’ve taken a broader look, not just at the technology but the future trajectory of autonomous vehicles and what it’s going to take to commercial­ize them and be successful.”

Waymo has been testing self-driving cars for years on the roads in California and other states, with 2 million miles of experience.

The companies were ranked on a long list of criteria that includes technology, strategy and vision. But high priority is given to the ability to manufactur­e, sell, market and distribute driverless vehicles, so the traditiona­l automakers naturally have a head start.

Tesla ranked 12th. The company has a strong vision for the future, and Autopilot “is arguably the best driver assist system in production right now,” Abuelsamid said.

But, he said, the com- pany lags behind in sensor technology.

“Lidar is the single biggest reason,” Abuelsamid said.

Tesla chief Elon Musk has set himself apart from all other autonomous-driving developers by eschewing lidar, a sensor that bounces laser beams off objects to create images that supplement cameras and radar. Musk said Tesla doesn’t need lidar; critics say lidar is expensive and Musk is trying to keep costs low.

Tesla uses a suite of sensors — cameras, ultrasound and radars. Other companies use those too, but add lidar to the mix. Because Tesla’s long-term viability has yet to be determined, it also ranked low on staying power. Tesla declined to comment on the study.

Uber, ranked 16th, “is an interestin­g case,” Abuelsamid said. “They have a pretty strong vision, but like the other non-auto players, they don’t have sales, marketing and distributi­on beyond their ride-hailing app.”

It won’t be hard for automakers to replicate the Uber app, he said, but it will be hard for Uber to assemble a massive fleet of autonomous cars to replace human drivers who maintain their own cars. “Their expenses are likely to explode, not get lower,” he said.

He added that Uber has yet to show that its automated vehicles are reliable, citing a video of an Uber car equipped with driverless technology running a red light in San Francisco as the most familiar counter example. Uber is also testing selfdrivin­g cars on the streets of Pittsburgh, Tucson and other locations.

Waymo’s technology is the most advanced, according to the rankings, but Abuelsamid said, “They have no production capacity and for now no production deals.” Waymo is tied for seventh place with Volvo.

The study is a snapshot in time, and Navigant noted that it could change dramatical­ly over the years as partnershi­ps are formed, new players come on the scene and the leaders either take advantage of their strengths, or don’t.

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