Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Automated-car makers ordered to report crashes

- DRIVINGTOM KRISHER

DETROIT — The U. S. government’s highway safety agency has ordered automakers to report any crashes involving fully autonomous vehicles or partially automated driver assist systems.

The move Tuesday by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion indicates the agency is taking a tougher stance on automated vehicle safety than in the past. It has been reluctant to issue any regulation­s of the new technology for fear of hampering adoption of the potentiall­y life- saving systems.

The order requires vehicle and equipment manufactur­ers and companies that operate the vehicles to report crashes on public roads involving fully autonomous vehicles, or those in which driver assist systems were operating immediatel­y before or during a crash.

“By mandating crash reporting, the agency will have access to critical data that will help quickly identify safety issues that could emerge in these automated systems,” Steven Cliff, acting administra­tor of the safety agency, said in a statement.

The agency says it will look for potential safety defects, and the informatio­n could cause it to send out a crash investigat­ion team or open a defect investigat­ion.

The order comes after the agency has dispatched special investigat­ion teams to 31 crashes involving partially automated driver assist systems since June of 2016. Such systems can keep a vehicle centered in its lane and a safe distance from vehicles in front of it. Of those crashes, 25 involved Tesla’s Autopilot system in which 10 deaths were reported, according to data released by the agency.

Tesla and other manufactur­ers warn that drivers using the systems must be ready to intervene at all times. Teslas using the system have crashed into semis crossing in front of them, stopped emergency vehicles and a roadway barrier.

The agency also is investigat­ing non-fatal crashes involving partially automated systems in a Lexus RX450H, a Volvo XC-90, and two Cadillac CT6s. In addition, teams investigat­ed crashes involving an automated lowspeed shuttle from French company Navya Arma, and another Volvo XC90 operated by Uber in which a pedestrian was killed in Arizona.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board, which also has investigat­ed some of the Tesla crashes, has recommende­d that the highway safety agency and Tesla limit Autopilot’s use to areas where it can safely operate. The board also recommende­d that the agency require Tesla to have a better system to make sure drivers are paying attention. The highway safety agency has not taken action on any of the recommenda­tions.

Jason Levine, executive director of the nonprofit Center for Auto Safety, an advocacy group, said the crash reporting is a welcome first step by the agency. The center has been asking the agency to oversee automated vehicles for several years.

“Collecting crash data, and hopefully data from crashes which were avoided, can help serve a variety of purposes from enforcing current laws, to ensuring the safety of consumers, as well as paving the way for reasonable regulation­s to encourage the deployment of safe advanced vehicle technology,” Levine said in an email.

Companies have to report crashes involving fully autonomous or partially automated vehicles within one day of learning about them, if they involve a hospital-treated injury, a death, air bag deployment, pedestrian­s or bicyclists, or were serious enough for a vehicle to be towed away.

Other crashes involving vehicles equipped with the systems involving injury or property damage have to be reported every month. The requiremen­t does not apply to consumers who own vehicles or auto dealers.

The agency says in a statement that the data can show if there are common patterns in crashes involving the systems.

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