Waterloo Region Record

A fuel economy headache

Engineers are trying to address driverless car tech’s huge power drain

- Gabrielle Coppola and Esha Dey

NEW YORK — Judging from General Motors Co.’s test cars and Elon Musk’s prediction­s, the world is headed toward a future that’s both driverless and all-electric. In reality, autonomy and battery power could end up being at odds.

That’s because self-driving technology is a huge power drain. Some of today’s prototypes for fully autonomous systems consume two to four kilowatts of electricit­y — the equivalent of having 50 to 100 laptops continuous­ly running in the trunk, according to BorgWarner Inc. The supplier of vehicle propulsion systems expects the first autonomous cars — likely robotaxis that are constantly on the road — will be too energy-hungry to run on battery power alone.

In an industry where the number of LEDs in a brake light are scrutinize­d for their impact on gas mileage, processing data from laser, radar and camera sensors will be an enormous challenge — not just for coders working on machine learning, but for engineers trying to power vehicles efficientl­y. As major markets from California to China ratchet up pressure to curb pollution, automakers and their suppliers will have to find creative new ways to offset emissions produced by feeding the car’s increasing­ly intelligen­t brain.

“We’ve been battling all the time because the government­s are always pushing for a few per cent improvemen­t every year,” Scott Gallett, vice-president of marketing at BorgWarner, said of fuel-economy standards. “This just amplifies that challenge.”

The autonomous features on a Level 4 or 5 vehicle, which can operate without human interventi­on, devour so much power that it makes meeting fuel economy and carbon emissions targets five to 10 per cent harder, according to Chris Thomas, Borg-

Warner’s chief technology officer.

To be sure, those calculatio­ns are based on prototype cars with sensors rigged on the roof, and the power demands of electronic­s inside the car will inevitably fall as the technology improves. But even if chipmakers pull off promises to reduce power consumptio­n by as much as 90 per cent, automakers will still need to make fuel efficiency gains elsewhere in the vehicles to compensate for all that computing, Thomas said.

“They’re worried about one watt, and now you’re adding a couple thousand,” Thomas said. “It’s not trivial.”

A fully autonomous subcompact car like a Honda Fit, for example, will get 54.6 miles to the gallon in 2025 in the best-case scenario, more than five miles below the U.S. emissions target, according to BorgWarner. A small pickup or SUV would be at 45.8 mpg, versus a target of 50.

Engineers don’t have much time to resolve this, as companies are planning to deploy their first fully self-driving cars in the next couple of years. GM’s Cruise Automation announced last month that a version of the allelectri­c Chevrolet Bolt that can operate without a driver is now capable of being mass produced.

Musk had said Tesla Inc. plans to demonstrat­e a fully autonomous cross-country trip by the end of this year, although he cautioned during an earnings call in August that the timing of the drive may slip.

One way for automakers to meet the power-hungry needs of self-driving systems will be to use gasoline-electric hybrid models rather than purely electric cars, said Mary Gustanski, chief technology officer of supplier Delphi Automotive Plc’s powertrain business.

Sam Jaffe, founder of Cairn Energy Research Advisors, said hybrid-electric vehicles probably make sense for the first driverless cars, which are likely to be robotaxis.

“They’re going to favour plugin hybrid EVs, and they’re going to require that extra gasoline engine, both to extend the range to be able to do a taxi type of duty cycle, but also to help mitigate the proportion of the autonomous systems on the battery pack itself,” said Jaffe, whose research and consulting firm specialize­s in energy storage.

Alphabet Inc.’s Waymo, which started an experiment­al service ferrying people around in its self-driving cars in Phoenix earlier this year, has been using Chrysler Pacifica hybrid minivans.

Another automaker envisionin­g autonomous hybrids is Ford Motor Co., which said last week it had set up a new unit to accelerate developmen­t of electric vehicles. But Jim Farley, Ford’s president of global markets, told investors Ford believes hybrids are “the right tech to start with.”

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