Bangkok Post

California halts selfdrivin­g cars

- JACK CLARK

SAN FRANCISCO: Fully autonomous vehicles aren’t ready for prime time, as far as California’s Department of Motor Vehicles is concerned.

The agency published draft regulation­s on Wednesday for how manufactur­ers can move from testing self-driving car technologi­es to start making vehicles available to customers.

California, as the state with the most cars on the road, often ends up setting many of the standards for the auto industry. Silicon Valley is where much of the research into autonomous vehicles is taking place, while many automakers have their design shops in the Los Angeles area. For now the DMV isn’t allowing automated cars that don’t have a human driver, even though Google Inc is building one that’s designed to work without a person behind the wheel.

“Given the potential risks associated with deployment of such a new technology, the DMV believes manufactur­ers need to obtain more experience in testing driverless vehicles on public roads prior to making this technology available to the general public,” the agency wrote.

Recent vehicle prototypes by Google are designed to move at the push of a button, and have no steering wheels or pedals. Google plans to spin out its self-driving car division into its own company next year, and introduce services in Austin and San Francisco. The proposed DMV regulation­s may affect plans for San Francisco.

“Safety is our highest priority and primary motivator as we do this,” Johnny Luu, a spokesman for Google, said in a statement. “We’re gravely disappoint­ed that California is already writing a ceiling on the potential for fully self-driving cars to help all of us who live here.”

For cars with self-driving features that also require a human driver, approved manufactur­ers will be issued a three-year permit and the vehicles can only be operated by the manufactur­er or leased to the general public. Several automakers, including Tesla Motors Inc, already sell products in this category.

Drivers will also be responsibl­e for any traffic violations.

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