Gulf News

Canadian insurer backs Florida company

Voyage’s fleets of self-driving taxis cruise the streets of retirement community

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There’s a village in Florida where self-driving cars rule the road, and a Canadian insurance firm wants to come along for the ride.

Toronto-based Intact Financial Corp is investing $3 million (Dh11 million) in start-up Voyage as the companies seek to shape the future of driverless­car insurance.

Voyage runs a dozen selfdrivin­g cars in The Villages in Florida, one of the largest retirement communitie­s in the US. It’s located north of Orlando with more than 1,207 kilometres of road and 125,000 people who call it home. The autonomous taxis are outfitted with Lidar sensors that help the car navigate by creating a 3-D map of the road to identify objects like other cars, cyclists and pedestrian­s. They cruise around the privately-owned roads, picking up residents on demand. Voyage, which has a similar project in its hometown of San Jose, California, plans to expand its fleet over the next few years.

As part of the project, each of Voyage’s driverless cars will send informatio­n it collects to Intact to interpret at its machine learning division. Intact’s lab, with 50 employees based primarily in Montreal, will assess the data to create a real-time risk profile based on the immediate environmen­t to structure, underwrite, and price insurance products. The less dangerous the driving situation at any given moment, the lower the insurance charge — and vice versa. “We’re trying to understand what our cars see of the world and what our cars understand of the world,” said Oliver Cameron, chief executive officer of Voyage.

“Let’s say we’ve got an increasing amount of pedestrian­s crossing the road and there’s a downtown intersecti­on with people and cars pulling into the street from different directions. Given that the car is seeing more chaos, the rates would rise just that little bit.”

Driverless vehicles are transformi­ng the transporta­tion industry as ride-sharing services like Uber Technologi­es, the establishe­d car rental companies and Alphabet’s Waymo jockey for position. And as more such cars hit the road, it could lead to fewer accidents, thereby threatenin­g existing auto insurance models, where revenue from premiums totalled $230 billion in 2017. “We know that selfdrivin­g vehicles will emerge and have an impact on every industry in the future and insurance is no exception,” said Karim Hirji, senior vice president at Intact Ventures, the company’s research and innovation division.

While Hirji believes that autonomous vehicles will make the roads safer for passengers and pedestrian­s, driverless cars won’t appear in most cities and communitie­s anytime soon.

“It’s hard to have a forecast, but I think we’re still at least 10 years away before we could see a large number of these cars on public roads,” Hirji said. “And even then, it could be debatable whether they’ll only be in specific areas, like urban areas.”

The autonomous taxis are outfitted with Lidar sensors that help the car navigate by creating a 3-D map of the road to identify objects like other cars, cyclists and pedestrian­s.

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