Los Angeles Times

Arizona halts robot car tests

Decision against Uber comes after fatality. Also, a supplier says the firm disabled Volvo’s safety system before the crash.

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Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey suspended Uber Technologi­es Inc.’s self-driving car tests on Monday, after the death of a pedestrian who was hit by one of the company's vehicles while crossing a road in Tempe.

“Improving public safety has always been the emphasis of Arizona's approach to autonomous vehicle testing, and my expectatio­n is that public safety is also the top priority for all who operate this technology in the state of Arizona,” Ducey said in his letter to Chief Executive Dara Khosrowsha­hi.

“The incident that took place on March 18 is an unquestion­able failure to comply with this expectatio­n.”

Also Monday, the autoparts maker that supplied the radar and camera on the Volvo SUV that killed the woman last week said Uber had disabled the standard collision-avoidance technology in the vehicle.

“We don’t want people to be confused or think it was a failure of the technology that we supply for Volvo, because that’s not the case,” Zach Peterson, a spokesman for Aptiv, said by phone. The Volvo XC90’s standard advanced driver-assistance system “has nothing to do” with the Uber test vehicle’s autonomous driving system, he said.

Aptiv is speaking up for its technology to avoid being tainted by the fatality involving Uber, which may have been following standard practice by disabling other tech as it develops and tests its own autonomous driving system. Experts who saw video of the Uber crash pointed to apparent failures in Uber’s sensor system, which failed to stop or slow the car as 49-year-old Elaine Herzberg crossed a street pushing a bicycle.

Police in Tempe and the National Transporta­tion Safety Board are investigat­ing the incident.

Uber didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The driverless technology industry has tried in recent days to separate itself from the Uber fatality. Intel Corp.’s Mobileye, which makes chips and sensors used in collision-avoidance systems and is a supplier to Aptiv — which helps power the Volvo XC90’s driver-assistance system — said Monday that it tested its own software after the crash by playing a video of the Uber incident on a television monitor.

Mobileye said it was able to detect Herzberg one second before impact in its internal tests, despite the poor secondhand quality of the video relative to a direct connection to cameras equipped to the car.

Waymo CEO John Krafcik on Saturday said his company’s self-driving software would probably have avoided the pedestrian death. “We have a lot of confidence that our technology would be robust and would be able to handle situations like that one,” Krafcik said in a speech to car dealers. Alphabet Inc.’s Waymo, the former Google car project, is considered the technical leader in the field.

Meanwhile, a top executive for the maker of sensors used on the self-driving Uber vehicle said she was “baffled” as to why the tech-outfitted vehicle failed to recognize a pedestrian crossing the street and hit the brakes.

Marta Thoma Hall, president of Velodyne Lidar Inc., maker of the laser radar that helps an autonomous car “see” its surroundin­gs, said the company doesn’t believe its technology failed. But she’s surprised the car didn’t detect Herzberg.

“Certainly, our Lidar is capable of clearly imaging Elaine and her bicycle in this situation,” Thoma Hall wrote in an email. “However, our Lidar doesn’t make the decision to put on the brakes or get out of her way.

“In addition to Lidar, autonomous systems typically have several sensors, including camera and radar to make decisions,” she wrote. “We don’t know what sensors were on the Uber car that evening, if they were working, or how they were being used.”

The New York Daily News contribute­d to this report.

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