Las Vegas Review-Journal

Fiat Chrysler spending $30M on self-driving test facility

- By Eric D. Lawrence Detroit Free Press

Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s is adding more muscle to its self-driving vehicle testing efforts.

The company will spend more than $30 million at a new testing and developmen­t facility at its Chelsea Proving Grounds west of Detroit. Testing begins this month at the facility, which will include a “dedicated autonomous highway-speed track, 35-acre safety-feature evaluation area and a hightech command center,” according to a company news release.

It’s the second self-driving vehicle-related announceme­nt the company has made in recent weeks. Last month, FCA said its Magneti Marelli components business would acquire a French startup — Startmeup — focused on self-driving car software, for an undisclose­d price.

The twin announceme­nts follow the release in June of the company’s five-year plan, where it dedicated a presentati­on to the company’s self-driving and connected vehicle efforts. That presentati­on highlighte­d the company’s focus in developing the technology through partnershi­ps, such as by supplying up to 62,000 Chrysler Pacifica Hybrids to Waymo’s self-driving project by 2021.

Former CEO Sergio Marchionne, who died in July, had pushed back against critics for suggesting that the company was a laggard in the developmen­t of self-driving technology, saying last year that FCA’S approach gives the company a chance to get a “technicall­y correct solution at a commercial­ly defensible price.”

New CEO Mike Manley said in the news release that the Chelsea facility would “help support and enable” the rollout of the five-year plan.

“Our ability to test for autonomous and advanced safety technologi­es enables FCA to offer our customers the features they want across our brand portfolio,” Manley said in the release.

The test track will provide a range of environmen­ts.

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