AEB MOVING ON TO MUST-HAVE LIST
Autonomous Emergency Braking could soon to be mandated in NZ
The Australian Government has announced that it will introduce an Australian Design Rule (ADR) mandating the fitment of Autonomous Emergency Braking (AEB) in light vehicles, with flow-on effects expected for New Zealand.
The Australian report indicated that a catalyst for the Government mandate comes from the fact that Australia’s vehicle manufacturing industry is winding down, which presents an opportunity for their vehicle fleet to increasingly adopt world-class safety features, without the limitations of domestic manufacturing.
Australian Design Rules (ADRs) are national standards for vehicle safety and emissions. They cover areas such as occupant protection, vehicle structures, lighting, noise, exhaust emissions, and braking systems.
The current standards are administered by the Australian Government under the Motor Vehicle Standards Act 1989. The
Act requires all road vehicles, whether they are newly manufactured in Australia or are imported as new or second-hand vehicles, to comply with the relevant ADRs at the time of manufacture and supply to the Australian market.
These are also the standards we look for when importing an Australian vehicle into NZ.
The new rule specifies the regulatory requirement for AEB systems to be fitted on newly introduced (all-new and not a product update) vehicle models from March 2023, and all models on sale in Australia from March 2025 — which is slightly behind the European regulatory introduction timeframe of July 2022 and July 2024 for the same.
The mandate will apply to all passenger cars, off-road passenger cars and light goods vehicles (MA, MB, MC, and NA category vehicles).
AEB has become a crucial modern vehicle safety feature. Its primary function is to prevent or minimise a crash by applying the vehicle brakes if the driver doesn’t or cannot apply the brakes.
Since NZ vehicle distributors often rely on the vehicle model specs destined for Australia, this mandate should ensure that the vehicles we see will have AEB by default. The NZ Ministry of Transport (MOT) has also marked AEB among a raft of vehicle safety features and processes which are to be discussed in an upcoming meeting, so we may see a roadmap to adoption of similar regulations in NZ soon.
ANCAP and AEB
The Australasian New Car Assessment Program (ANCAP) introduced the testing of AEB in 2018 as part of its autonomous crash avoidance technologies tests, which included AEB City,
Interurban and Pedestrians and Cyclists, and broadened its AEB testing in 2020 to include AEB Junction and Backover testing.
ANCAP welcomed the announcement, saying it has been strongly encouraging the voluntary fitment of AEB technology across the Australian and NZ fleets since 2012, and more formally through its safety testing and star rating programme since 2015.
“AEB has consistently been shown to improve safety outcomes, and our latest analysis of new light vehicle sales shows 89.5 per cent of all new vehicles sold (in Australia) — 222 models — were available with AEB,” says ANCAP chief executive officer Carla Hoorweg.
In Australia, AEB has been shown to reduce police-reported crashes by 55 per cent, rear-end crashes by 40 per cent and vehicle occupant trauma by 28 per cent. These safety benefits are expected to improve further following the introduction of the ADR and evolution in the sophistication of AEB systems being encouraged through ANCAP’s safety rating criteria. It is estimated that the implementation of the ADR rule for Australia will save 580 lives and avoid 20,400 serious and 73,340 minor injuries with a net benefit of $1.9 billion.