Race for driverless future has slowed
Self-driving cars were set to make debut in state today but Uber fatality has made some rethink the rollout
Self-driving cars were supposed to make history today, when for the first time, they were allowed to operate on California roads without any human vehicle assistants.
But good luck finding any of the driverless cars on your local streets.
That’s because of the approximately 50 companies in the state said to be working on selfdriving cars, not a single one has applied to the California Department of Motor Vehicles for the permits necessary to send a car without a driver, or assistant in the passenger seat, out onto the state’s roads. And it doesn’t appear that anyone in the self-driving car industry is in a rush to submit the paperwork that would let them put a fully autonomous car out among the 14.5 million automobiles that were registered in California as of 2016.
“The DMV has the authority to begin issuing driverless testing and or deployment permits for autonomous vehicles on April 2,” said a DMV spokesperson, in a statement given to this news organization. “To date, no one has applied for either permit. If we receive an application, it will be reviewed.”
In February, after the state’s Office of Administrative Law approved allowing fully driverless cars on state roads, DMV director Jean Shiomoto called the event “a major step forward for autonomous technology in California,” which seemed to suggest that cars without drivers might soon be as common as any other vehicle on the highway.
However, last month’s accident in Tempe, Arizona, in which an Uber self-driving car with a
vehicle assistant on board struck and killed a pedestrian crossing a street at night, appears to have slowed the race to be the first on California roads with a truly driverless vehicle.
Uber immediately suspended testing of its selfdriving cars on public roads across the United States and Canada following the accident in Tempe.
Sarah Abboud, an Uber spokesperson, said the company had no comment about fully self-driving cars being legal in California on Monday because it is currently “heads down” in cooperating with the National Transportation Safety Board and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which are investigating the accident.
But whether or not Uber was going to apply for a full
“We don’t believe these things are ready to be put on the road without a driver of any kind.”
— John Simpson, privacy and technology project director
self-driving car permit is immaterial. The state DMV said March 27 that Uber had decided not to renew its current California permit to test self-driving cars when it expired on March 31. The DMV said Uber now will have to apply for a new permit should it want to again test self-driving cars on the state’s roads.
“This application process isn’t pro forma, either,” said John Simpson, privacy and technology project director at Consumer Watchdog, a nonpartisan group that has been critical of rapid growth in the selfdriving car industry.
“The DMV has the ability
to reject a permit, and we think they should go further and have a complete moratorium on all public road testing,” Simpson said. “We don’t believe these things are ready to be put on the road without a
driver of any kind.”
Lyft, Uber’s biggest rival in the ride-sharing industry, didn’t return a request for comment about any plans it has for testing fully self-driving cars on public roads in California.
But, Lyft has been busy on the self-driving car front this month, announcing it would begin testing autonomous vehicles at the 5,000-acre GoMentum Station facility in Concord, as well as take a $200 million investment from, and partner with, Canadian auto parts maker Magna on new self-driving car technologies.
Waymo, the self-driving car business that Google spun out in late 2016, made headlines Tuesday when company Chief Executive John Krafcik unveiled plans for building an all-electric, driverless car with Jaguar. Krafcik said Waymo would begin service with the Jaguar IPace cars in Phoenix this year.
But, when it comes to California, Waymo isn’t in a rush to get its cars on the road.
“Waymo would like to eventually test and eventually deploy driverless vehicles in CA,” said a Way spokesperson, “and we’ll take the steps necessary to do so.”
The only question now, for all of these companies, is when.