The Guardian (USA)

Self-driving car users could watch films on motorway under new DfT proposals

- Tobi Thomas

Users of self-driving cars will be able to watch films on the motorway under planned changes to the Highway Code, although it will remain illegal to use mobile phones.

The update, proposed by the Department for Transport (DfT), will allow those in the driver’s seat to use a car’s built-in screens to watch movies and TV programmes.

The new rules also state that insurance companies will be financiall­y liable, rather than individual motorists, for accidents in self-driving cars.

However, those behind the wheel must be ready to resume control of the vehicle when they are prompted – such as when they approach motorway exits. These measures were described as an interim measure by the government to support the early deployment of selfdrivin­g vehicles.

Although there are no vehicles currently approved for self-driving on roads in the UK, the first could be approved later this year. The introducti­on of the technology is likely to begin with vehicles travelling at slow speeds on motorways, such as in congested traffic.

In April 2021, the DfT said it would allow hands-free driving in vehicles with lane-keeping technology on congested motorways. Existing technology, including cruise control and automatic stop/start, is classified as being “assistive”, meaning that users must remain fully in control.

Trudy Harrison, a transport minister, said the updates were the result of a public consultati­on, and would be a “major milestone in our safe introducti­on of self-driving vehicles”, which would “revolution­ise the way we travel”.

She added: “This exciting technology is developing at pace right here in Great Britain and we’re ensuring we have strong foundation­s in place for drivers when it takes to our roads.

“In doing so, we can help improve travel for all while boosting economic growth across the nation and securing

Britain’s place as a global science superpower.”

Steve Gooding, the director of the pro-motoring thinktank RAC Foundation, said: “The Highway Code has been updated a number of times in recent years to reflect the rapidly changing transport world we live in, and these latest additions will help us all understand what we must and must not do as we move forward to an environmen­t where cars drive themselves.

“The final part of the jigsaw is to ensure these amendments are widely communicat­ed to, and understood by, vehicle owners. Vehicle manufactur­ers and sellers will have a vital role to play in ensuring their customers fully appreciate the capabiliti­es of the cars they buy and the rules that govern them.”

Earlier this year, the Law Commission of England and Wales and the Scots Law commission published a joint report, which recommende­d the introducti­on of a new Automated Vehicles Act.

The proposals for the act would be that when a car is authorised to be “self-driving”, and those features are in use, the user would no longer be responsibl­e for how the car drives, but rather the company which obtained the authorisat­ion would. Therefore, the user would be unable to be prosecuted for offences that come directly from the driving, and so would be immune to offences that include dangerous driving.

The UK, Scottish and Welsh government­s are deciding whether to accept the report’s recommenda­tions and bring them into legislatio­n, with the government­s expecting to have a full regulatory framework in place to support the widespread deployment of driverless vehicle technology by 2025.

 ?? ?? No vehicles have been approved for self-driving in the UK yet, but the first could be approved later this year. Photograph: Scharfsinn/Alamy
No vehicles have been approved for self-driving in the UK yet, but the first could be approved later this year. Photograph: Scharfsinn/Alamy

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