The Asian Age

NISSAN LEAF MAKES COMPLEX DRIVERLESS TRIP

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Cranfield (England), Feb. 5: A Nissan car has completed a 230-mile journey autonomous­ly in Britain, the longest and most complex such trip in the country as carmakers race to develop driverless technologi­es which are revolution­ising travel.

Britain has been wooing developers of autonomous vehicles, hoping to grab a slice of an industry it estimates could be worth around £900 billion ($1.2 trillion) worldwide in 2035.

The Nissan LEAF vehicle undertook the 370 km journey from the Japanese carmaker’s European technical center in Cranfield, southern England, to its Sunderland factory in the north east, alongside convention­al road users.

It included roads with no or minimal markings, junctions, roundabout­s and motorways, using advanced positionin­g technology helped by GPS, radar and light detection and ranging equipment, allowing vehicles to navigate roads and obstacles.

“The ... project allowed us to develop an autonomous vehicle that can tackle challenges encountere­d on UK roads that are unique to this part of the world, such as complex roundabout­s and high-speed country lanes with no road markings, white lines or kerbs,” said Nissan Technical Centre Project Manager Bob Bateman.

The project, known as HumanDrive and led by Nissan as part of a consortium, also received government funding.

Nissan has previously said Britain’s flexible approach to testing autonomous vehicles helped it pick London for its first European tests in 2017 when a driverless vehicle traveled up to 50 miles per hour.

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