Sunderland Echo

Highway Code update to allow watching TV in self-driving cars

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Users of self-driving cars will not be responsibl­e for crashes under proposed changes to the Highway Code.

Insurance companies ratherthan individual­s will be liable for claims in those circumstan­ces, the Department for Transport said (DfT).

The update to the Code will make it clear that motorists must be ready to take back control of vehicles when needed.

The DfT also intends to allow drivers to watch television programmes and film son built in screens while using self-driving cars.

It will still be illegal to use a phone behind the wheel.

These measures – which follow a public consultati­on – were described as an interim measure by the Government to support the early deployment of self-driving vehicles.

A full regulatory framework is expected to be in place by 2025.

There are no vehicles approved for self-driving on Britain’s roads, but the first could be given the go-ahead this year.

The DfT announced in April 2021 it would allow hands-free driving in vehicles with lanekeepin­g technology on congested motorways.

Existing technology on the market such as cruise control and automatic stop/start is classified as “assistive”, meaning users must remain fully in control.

Transport minister Trudy Harrison said updating to the Highway Code will be a “major milestone in our safe introducti­on of self-driving vehicles”, which she claimed will “revolution­ise the way we travel, making our future journeys greener, safer and more reliable”.

She went on: “This exciting technology is developing at pace right here in Great Britain and we’re ensuring we have strong foundation­s in place for drivers when it takes to our roads.

“In doing so, we can help improve travel for all while boosting economic growth across the nation and securing Britain’s place as a global science superpower.”

The developmen­t of selfdrivin­g vehicles could create around 38,000 new jobs in Britainand be worth £41.7 billion to the economy by 2035, according to the DfT.

Steve Gooding, director of motoring research charity the RAC Foundation, said driverless cars “promise a future where death and injury on our roads are cut significan­tly” but there is likely to be a“long period of transition” while drivers retain “much of the responsibi­lity for what happens”.

He stressed the importance of changes to regulation­s being communicat­ed to drivers.

“Vehicle manufactur­ers and sellers will have a vital role to play in ensuring their customers fully appreciate the capabiliti­es of the cars they buy and the rules that govern them,” he said.

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