Santa Fe New Mexican

Arizona to have place to test self-driving technology

- By Terry Tang

PHOENIX — Arizona will be home to a new, sprawling facility solely dedicated to researchin­g autonomous vehicles, signaling the state’s full embrace of the growing technology.

Gov. Doug Ducey signed an executive order Thursday creating the newly minted Institute for Automated Mobility. The proposed hub will focus on the technology and its integratio­n into the real world, he said in a statement.

Multiple state agencies, Arizona’s three major public universiti­es and tech giant Intel are partnering on the project. The facility will include a simulation lab to test various road scenarios. Academics from the universiti­es will be expected to study and publish findings on safety-related issues. Dr. Sethuraman Panchanath­an, Ducey’s senior adviser for science and technology, described the hub as a “concierge-type service” for research and developmen­t projects.

“This truly takes a village approach. All discipline­s have to come together,” Panchanath­an said.

Arizona is not the first state to have an epicenter devoted to autonomous cars. In April, Michigan opened a 500-acre nonprofit center for autonomous vehicle research with Microsoft as a partner. The American Center for Mobility, outside of Ypsilanti, was designated by the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion as one of 10 “proving grounds” for an automated vehicle pilot program. It includes a test track for autonomous cars.

The University of Michigan also has its own 32-acre “Mcity” in Ann Arbor for experiment­ation with driverless cars.

A location for the Arizona facility was not disclosed but metropolit­an Phoenix continues to be a frequent testing ground for driverless vehicles. The area, however, was also the site of the first fatality involving a selfdrivin­g vehicle.

A self-driving Uber SUV struck and killed a pedestrian in the Phoenix suburb of Tempe in March. Authoritie­s determined the human backup driver was watching a program on her cellphone and looking down just before the crash. The incident wouldn’t have happened had the driver not been distracted, according to the police report. Uber later ceased testing the cars in Arizona but has since relaunched efforts elsewhere.

The Arizona Commerce Authority will oversee the institute. President Sandra Watson said no state tax dollars are funding the project. The state so far has kicked in $1.5 million, which came from old small business loans that have since been repaid. Intel is investing an undisclose­d amount.

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