Montreal Gazette

U.S. automakers to adopt crash-avoidance systems

Most vehicles to have the potentiall­y life-saving technology by year 2022

- JEFF PLUNGIS

Twenty major automakers announced a voluntaril­y agreement to equip cars and trucks with automatic emergency-braking systems designed to detect and prevent crashes without driver action.

The agreement announced last week specified that almost all U.S. cars and trucks will include the technology by 2022.

The U.S. Transporta­tion Department and the insurance industry have been in talks since last year on voluntary commitment­s that would cover most new models. Automatic emergency braking systems use radar or other sensors to detect an imminent crash and, if needed, engage the brakes to avoid or minimize the impact of a rear-end collision.

The systems are designed to respond quicker than human reflexes in a crash situation. Human error is responsibl­e for 94 per cent of all traffic crashes, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion.

In September, only nine automakers were participat­ing in the talks: General Motors Co., Ford Motor Co., Toyota Motor Corp., Tesla Motors Inc., BMW AG, Daimler AG, Mazda Motor Corp., Volvo Cars and Volkswagen AG.

AUTONOMOUS CARS

Automatic emergency braking is one of the biggest recent safety breakthrou­ghs, reducing the likelihood of rear-end collisions by up to 40 per cent, according to Jake Fisher, director of automotive testing at Consumer Reports magazine. It’s an important step toward cars becoming autonomous, he said.

The magazine, which influences consumers and manufactur­ers alike with auto ratings, changed its scoring system to give extra credit for models that come with emergency braking as a standard feature. Too often, automakers have been forcing car buyers to pay extra for the systems, and so only a small percentage of cars sold currently are being equipped with the potentiall­y life-saving technology, Fisher said.

NEW FEATURES

Automakers will need to roll out a host of other autonomous-driving features in their fleets in the coming years to stay competitiv­e, said Karl Brauer, senior analyst with Kelley Blue Book, a car-buying informatio­n website.

“The incrementa­l cost of adding these high-tech driver aids is dropping every year, which is good for automakers because consumers are quickly coming to expect them, even on lower- prices models,” Brauer said.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Human error is responsibl­e for 94 per cent of all traffic crashes, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion.
GETTY IMAGES Human error is responsibl­e for 94 per cent of all traffic crashes, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion.

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