Albuquerque Journal

New rules open path to self-driving cars

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LOS ANGELES — Although consumers can’t yet get a self-driving car, the technology’s long and windy road to market is getting shorter.

A public rollout is not imminent. Companies need to perfect the technology before unleashing it for regular drivers, and that means more of the highway and road testing that began several years ago.

Still, California’s Department of Motor Vehicles formally proposed rules Wednesday that, starting next year, will govern how everyday people in the state can get robocars. It was a big step forward for regulation­s that were first discussed more than four years ago, first drafted in December 2015 and then substantia­lly redrafted to accommodat­e companies’ concerns.

Several other states also are vying to get these cars of the future into the hands of their residents.

What should the public know about access?

IS THE TECHNOLOGY SAFE? Safety is paramount, both as a selling point and a potential liability.

Traditiona­l automakers and Silicon Valley upstarts are trying to teach cars to drive in different ways, but all agree that cars which don’t drink, text, fall asleep or drive erraticall­y can save thousands of lives. If the technology were reliably better than human drivers, however, it would be nearing a launch that most companies say is a few years away.

At the same time, in California alone, the 42 companies with testing permits have been logging hundreds of thousands of miles on nearly 300 prototypes with few crashes that were clearly technology’s fault.

That testing requires a trained safety driver behind the wheel, just in case onboard computers and sensors fail. Arizona, Michigan and Texas also have hosted testing.

Unlike earlier iterations, the current proposal would let companies self-certify the technology is road ready. That is the same approach as human-driven cars, to which consumer advocates retort that such a huge leap in technology should require outside scrutiny before a public launch.

WHEN WILL ANY OF THESE CARS BE

AVAILABLE? Consumers probably won’t be able to buy a fully driverless vehicle next year. Major automakers like Mercedes, BMW, Ford, Nissan and Volvo have all said it will be closer to 2020 before those vehicles are available, and even then, they could be confined to ride-hailing fleets and other shared applicatio­ns.

Tesla Inc. says the cars it’s making now have the hardware they need for full selfdrivin­g. The company is still testing the software and won’t make it available without regulatory approval.

Industry leader Waymo, as the former Google self-driving car program is known, is not commenting on its rollout schedule.

It’s also possible, if not likely, that the technology will proliferat­e not as a car that one person owns, but rather a shared vehicle that riders can summon with an app or subscripti­on.

WHAT ABOUT THE FEDS? Automakers and tech companies have complained to lawmakers that a growing “patchwork” of state laws threatens to inhibit deployment.

Legislatio­n intended to clear away federal regulation­s has moved quickly through Congress. The House has passed a bill that would permit automakers to seek exemptions to safety regulation­s, such as to make cars without a steering wheel, and allow the sale of self-driving cars. A Senate committee approved a similar measure last week by a voice vote.

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