Los Angeles Times

The road to self-driving cars

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Driverless cars offer a future with fewer deaths on the roadways. Today, roughly nine out of 10 car crashes are caused by human error; autonomous vehicles, with their sensors, radars and undistract­able computer-driven system, should be much safer. That is, they should be much safer eventually.

But they still have some glaring shortcomin­gs, a point that was underlined in tragic fashion this week. On Sunday a selfdrivin­g Uber plowed into a pedestrian walking across a road in Tempe, Arizona, killing her. A video released Wednesday shows that the woman was crossing mid-street in the dark. The car didn’t slow down or swerve, according to reports. There was no attempt by the vehicle or the back-up operator (who had been looking away from the windshield) to avoid crashing into the woman.

This is the kind of situation in which an autonomous car is supposed to perform better than a human driver. The radar and sensors these vehicles rely on are designed to pick up what the human eye may miss in the shadows. That didn’t happen Sunday in Tempe. Federal authoritie­s are investigat­ing the collision.

Uber immediatel­y suspended self-driving car programs in San Francisco, Pittsburgh, Toronto and the Phoenix area. Toyota and NuTonomy, a Boston-based self driving company, announced this week that they would temporaril­y suspend testing.

That’s the right response. There’s been a race among carmakers and tech companies to see who can get their experiment­al vehicles on the street and to the market first. There’s also been heavy lobbying on lawmakers to allow the mass deployment of self-driving vehicles. While it was inevitable that a driverless car would eventually be involved in a fatal collision — autonomous vehicles are unlikely to eliminate crashes, just reduce them — it would be irresponsi­ble to speed ahead without taking stock of how this new technology is performing.

There’s a dilemma, of course. Companies need to be able to test their driverless cars on public roads in order to design systems that can respond to real-life situations. Cities and states need those tests as well to understand how to prepare for the arrival of autonomous cars. Transporta­tion safety regulators, as well as manufactur­ers, have to figure out how to do more real-world, independen­tly verified stress-testing to hone the technology without harming people in the process. If that means slowing the rollout of driverless cars, that's OK.

So far, there’s no comprehens­ive data on how driverless cars are performing or whether the vehicles are ready for commercial use. There are no federal rules governing the deployment and performanc­e of autonomous technology. There are no standardiz­ed tests the cars are required to pass before using public roads. (Safety advocates, for example, have called for vehicles to pass a kind of drivers test to demonstrat­e that they can respond to cars, pedestrian­s and cyclists along their path, as well as traffic signs and road markings.) Current policies let the car's manufactur­er decide when the vehicle is safe enough for public use.

The Trump Administra­tion intends to continue that laissez-faire approach. And Congress is considerin­g legislatio­n that would allow up to 100,000 autonomous vehicles on the road per year before federal regulators develop safety standards for the technology. The proposal would also take away states’ ability to regulate autonomous vehicle systems’ performanc­e.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) and several colleagues have tried to put the brakes on the legislatio­n, arguing that it wouldn’t do enough to ensure that self-driving cars are no more likely to crash or cause injuries than human-driven cars are. Yet Feinstein and others are under enormous pressure. Carmakers and tech companies have lobbied for light-touch regulation because, they argue, driverless cars will ultimately be much safer than human-driven vehicles.

That may be true, eventually. Until then, we say, prove it.

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