Miami Herald

NHTSA opens investigat­ion into Ford's hands-free driving tech after multiple deaths

- BY CHRIS BENSON UPI

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion on Monday said it was opening an investigat­ion into Ford Motor Company’s BlueCruise driver-assisted technology after multiple fatalities had been linked to the software’s use.

In a report dated

April 25, the NHTSA’s Office of Defects Investigat­ion said it had “opened this Preliminar­y Evaluation to investigat­e the Ford BlueCruise system equipped on the subject vehicles.”

“This investigat­ion will evaluate the system’s performanc­e of the dynamic driving task and driver monitoring,” it read.

On Monday morning, Ford told TechCrunch that the car company is “working with NHTSA to support its investigat­ion.”

Two fatal crashes so far in 2024 — one in San Antonio, Texas, and the other in Philadelph­ia — are under investigat­ion by the NHTSB.

The driverless technology was first introduced by Ford in 2021 and enables a hands-free driving experience on premapped highways and other roads. It’s also available in some Lincoln-made vehicles.

The NHTSA’s Office of Defects Investigat­ion pointed to the Ford Mustang Mach-E’s equipped with the CoPilot360 Active 2.0 software that were made in cars from 2021-2024, which were involved in the fatal crashes.

The report said that vehicles had managed to hit stationary objects including stopped vehicles.

“Both collisions occurred during nighttime lighting conditions, and each incident resulted in at least one fatality,” it said.

In February, Ford CEO Jim Farley in

dicated that BlueCruise is still a very profitable venture for the company, calling it “some awesome tech.”

“BlueCruise just passed 150 million miles of handfree use, but more importantl­y, the growth is up 25 percent quarter-overquarte­r, and the gross margins for BlueCruise are at 70-plus percent,” Farley told Ford Authority.

Last July, Farley had announced on social media the BlueCruise 1.3 rollout which started that summer in Mustang MachE’s.

“Our ADAS team is making the hands-free highway driving experience even better!” he put on X.

The NHTSA has been busy in recent weeks and months.

Just days ago, the agency had closed an investigat­ion into the Autopilot feature on certain Tesla models, while at the same time opening a new probe into the car maker’s fix of the problem.

That came after December’s Tesla recall of over 2 million vehicles possibly over risk of Autosteer crashes. In early April, they were investigat­ing a Ford recall of 42,000 SUVs for fuel injector leak that were known to possibly cause fire.

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