The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Crashes put brakes on self-driving push

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A series of high-profile accidents involving selfdrivin­g cars are slowing the mad rush into the autonomous vehicles business, according to a report issued Wednesday.

The accidents, some of them fatal, have ignited a debate about how to regulate the safety of selfdrivin­g vehicles and tempered the public’s expectatio­ns, Bloomberg New Energy Finance said in the report. They’ve also exposed the downside of rushing to market, prompting some in the industry to slow down, said Andrew Grant, a London-based analyst at Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

Companies including Uber Technologi­es Inc., Tesla Inc. and Alphabet Inc.’s Google have been touting self-driving cars as the next revolution in transporta­tion. Pressure was mounting to make the technology road-worthy when one of Uber’s cars killed a pedestrian in Arizona in March. The company halted its autonomous-vehicle test program. Toyota Motor Corp. and Aptiv Plc’s Nutonomy then announced they were temporaril­y suspending public road testing in the U.S. Also in March, a driver of a Tesla Model X died in a crash in California that occurred while Autopilot was engaged.

“It gives them breathing room,” Grant said. “Now, they can stop telling investors a growth story. They don’t have to be as aggressive.”

While there have been no significan­t changes to federal autonomous-vehicle policies in the U.S. this year, Arizona in March ordered Uber to stop operating them on the state’s roads.

Regulators are scrutinizi­ng digital ride-hailing services, too, according to the BNEF report, citing concerns over public infrastruc­ture and their impact on labor markets.

The potential consequenc­es of ride-hailing services like Uber and Lyft Inc., such as less use of public transporta­tion and more traffic, have prompted several states to propose or pass new taxes. San Francisco and Seattle are also encouragin­g companies to disclose data on driver earnings and work hours.

“Most of the taxes imposed on ride-hailing services to date have been too small to change consumer behavior,” Grant said in an email. But as cities grapple with the adverse impacts on both traffic and publictran­sit use, “more taxation could be in the pipeline.”

Other findings from the BNEF report:

⏩ About 20,000 new vehicles were added to fleetbased, car-sharing businesses in the first quarter, boosting the global total to more than 200,000

⏩ Connected and autonomous-vehicle companies raised almost $400 million in private investment in the first quarter, down 37 percent from the fourth quarter

⏩ At the end of April, there were more than 900 million active users of digital hailing apps worldwide and 48 million drivers

 ?? Tribune News Service ?? An Uber self-driving Ford Fusion sits at a traffic light on Beechwood Boulevard and waits to turn onto Fifth Avenue in Pittsburgh
Tribune News Service An Uber self-driving Ford Fusion sits at a traffic light on Beechwood Boulevard and waits to turn onto Fifth Avenue in Pittsburgh

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