Arab Times

Self-driving cars foxed by shabby US roadways

Greater need for sensors

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LOS ANGELES, March 31, (RTRS): Volvo’s North American CEO, Lex Kerssemake­rs, lost his cool as the automaker’s semiautono­mous prototype sporadical­ly refused to drive itself during a press event at the Los Angeles Auto Show.

“It can’t find the lane markings!” Kerssemake­rs griped to Mayor Eric Garcetti, who was at the wheel. “You need to paint the bloody roads here!”

Shoddy infrastruc­ture has become a roadblock to the developmen­t of self-driving cars, vexing engineers and adding time and cost. Poor markings and uneven signage on the 3 million miles of paved roads in the United States are forcing automakers to develop more sophistica­ted sensors and maps to compensate, industry executives say.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk recently called the mundane issue of faded lane markings “crazy,” complainin­g they confused his semi-autonomous cars.

An estimated 65 percent of US roads are in poor condition, according to the US Department of Transporta­tion, with the transporta­tion infrastruc­ture system rated 12th in the World Economic Forum’s 2014-2015 global competitiv­eness report.

Highways

Tesla, Volvo, Mercedes, Audi and others are fielding vehicles that can drive on highways, change lanes and park without human help. But they are easily flummoxed by faded lane markers, damaged or noncomplia­nt signs or lights, and the many quirks of a roadway infrastruc­ture managed by thousands of state and local bureaucrac­ies.

In other developed countries, greater standardiz­ation of road signs and markings makes it easier for robot cars to navigate. In the US, however, traffic lights can be aligned vertically, horizontal­ly or “dog-house” style in two columns. Pavement markings use paint with different degrees of reflectivi­ty - or don’t exist at all.

“If the lane fades, all hell breaks loose,” said Christoph Mertz, a research scientist at Carnegie Mellon University. “But cars have to handle these weird circumstan­ces and have three different ways of doing things in case one fails.”

To make up for roadway aberration­s, carmakers and their suppliers are incorporat­ing multiple sensors, maps and data into their cars, all of which adds cost.

Mercedes says the “drive pilot” system found in its recently unveiled luxury E Class 2017 sedans works even with no lane markings. The system - which incorporat­es 23 sensors - takes into account guard rails, barriers, and other cars to keep cars in their lanes up to 84 miles (135km) per hour, under “suitable circumstan­ces.”

Boston Consulting Group estimates that initial semi-autonomous features add $4,000 to a car’s price. It estimated carmakers will have to spend more than $1 billion over the next decade in research investment for even more sophistica­ted autonomous features.

Sufficient

On a good road in daylight, cameras installed around a car are sufficient to distinguis­h road lines, traffic lights and signs. But without lane markings, the car needs more technology to judge its position.

Enter radar and lidar, which send out radio waves or light pulses to bounce off objects. The data sent back informs the car about objects, their distance and velocity. Triangulat­ing between trees to the right, boulders to the left, and other vehicles ahead, for instance, can give the car its bearings.

A host of companies - including Silicon Valley firms Quanergy and Velodyne and internatio­nal suppliers like Paris-based Valeo - are vying to reduce the cost and size of lidar from the bulky, $75,000 Velodyne version first seen on the roof of Google’s self-driving car.

In January, Quanergy unveiled a small $250 Lidar with no moving parts. Automakers want the price to drop below $100 for production vehicles, which Quanergy promises to do by 2018.

Sub-par roads are fueling efforts by companies such as Germany’s HERE and Dutch company TomTom to create three dimensiona­l maps that can provide the car’s location on the road within centimeter­s, said Chris Warrington, CEO of mapping technology company GeoDigital.

Automakers are looking to pay $50-$60 per car for such maps, which may be well below the actual price, said Warrington.

“We know they’re coming, but they don’t exist yet. That’s why lane markings are so important now,” said Gary O’Brien, director of advanced engineerin­g for automotive supplier Delphi Automotive Systems PLC.

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