Norway Leads the Way on Electric Cars

Nearly a third of all new cars sold in the country this year will be plug-in models and experts expect that share to skyrocket

By Adam Vaughan

While tourists explore Oslo’s history in the grounds of the centuries-old Akershus fortress, below their feet is a harbinger of the city’s future.

Here in the catacombs sit scores of Teslas, Nissan Leafs and BMW i3s, plugged into the charging points of the world’s largest public garage for electric cars.

Norway’s lead on electric cars has been driven by the government backing them with a wide range of generous incentives and perks, as a way of meeting its climate change ambitions.

Walter Mulling is on his first visit to the garage, and is excited about the prospect of parking and charging his electric VW Golf for free. “We are in the future,” he says.

Norway is the undisputed world leader on electric cars, run almost exclusively off the nation’s copious hydropower resource. Nearly a third of all new cars sold in the country this year will be a plug-in model – either fully electric or a hybrid – and experts expect that share to rise to as much as 40 percent next year.

The capital is a glimpse of what’s in store for the UK, where electric vehicles are nearing just 2 percent of new car sales but registrations are growing at a fast pace, up 38 percent this year so far. In Oslo, the streets are filled with silent, gliding cars, from large ones such as the Tesla X to smaller models such as the Renault Zoe. For the drivers of these cars, the motivation is simple – they just make financial sense.

Norway’s lead on electric cars has been driven by the government backing them with a wide range of generous incentives and perks, as a way of meeting its climate change ambitions. Buyers do not pay import tax and VAT on plug-in cars, shaving thousands of pounds off the upfront cost. Running costs are lower because electricity is cheaper than petrol and diesel, while road tax is reduced – and will drop to zero next year.

Electric car owners do not pay the mosaic of road tolls, ferry fees and city emissions charges that other Norwegians face. Moreover, they can park for free and bypass traffic by driving in some bus lanes.

“For my type of driving this is perfect,” says Vibeke Krohn, a pension fund executive. She uses a Mercedes B250e, which replaced an old diesel, to drop her children to school, commute to work and run errands.

“We have one [petrol] car we drive to the mountains and a small electric for the city,” says Krohn, who charges at home and says her only complaint is there are not more public charging points.

Despite the successful take-up of electric car in Norway, there is no guarantee that the lavish political support for battery-powered transport will continue. The government made headlines in October with its proposal to end tax exemptions for the heaviest electric cars in 2018, quickly labelled a “Tesla tax” because it would initially affect only two Tesla models.

For Jørgen Næsje, a minister at Norway’s finance department, the rationale was simple. “[Those] people who have the money to buy those very expensive and heavy cars could afford to buy [pay] some import tax,” he told the Guardian, adding his party did not see cars as a “cash cow”.

But electric car advocates argued the change was too early, and the minority government’s partners forced it to drop the measure during negotiations on the tax package. Christina Blu, the secretary general of the Norwegian Electric Vehicle Association, said the change would have deterred uptake of new large family models that are needed and coming on to the market next year, such as the Jaguar I-PACE.

“Norwegians like to buy big cars because they want to go in the mountains and things like that. If you want to go to 100 percent share, you have to help electric cars in the large segment,” she says, referring to Norway’s goal of 100 percent of new cars having zero emissions by 2025.

Viktor Irle, a market analyst at EV-Volumes, which tracks electric car sales globally, says demand in Norway is currently so great that there are months-long waiting lists for new models such as the I-PACE and Hyundai Ioniq.

Ending the exemption for heavier cars would make sense in coming years – but doing so now would shake the market, he says, adding: “I think it’s important to show stability from the political side.”

Ola Elvestuen, the deputy leader of the Liberal party, is pleased the Tesla tax proposal was defeated, but conceded government support will have to tail off eventually. “Over time, gradually, electric owners have to start to pay. But it has to be done in such a way that you don’t stop the transition,” he says.

Elvestuen is also relaxed at the prospect of fuel tax declining as electric cars come to dominate, arguing that overall the effect will be revenue neutral as taxation is shifted to other parts of the economy.

“Of course the government needs its revenue. But this is part of what we call a green tax shift. You have to tax what you want less of, and promote what you want more of,” he says.

Norwegian politicians reject the charge that only an affluent country such as Norway, made rich through oil and gas, could afford such support for electric vehicles. Per Espen Stoknes, an MP for the Green Party and an electric car owner, said: “I think that’s a misperception. I’m glad we’re doing it because it helps [bring] down the prices of electric vehicles, so it’s cheaper for other nations to follow us later. It’s part of a green taxation shift. Norway can do it because you’re rich? It doesn’t add up. It’s about what you tax.”

But in Oslo, not everyone wants a car, regardless of whether it is electric or not. Stoknes sees a shift coming, where electric motors and driverless technology combine to make the current car ownership model redundant.

“It’s very individualist, 20th century,” he said, of the idea of everyone having one or more cars of their own. “The next generation are completely cool with sharing.”

 

BY THE GUARDIAN

How much is LIDAR going to be worth in the automotive market?

Northbrook, IL — (SBWIRE) — 12/26/2017 — The report “LiDAR for Automotive Market by Technology (Mechanical and Solid State), Application (Semi-Autonomous and Autonomous), Location (Bumper and Grill, Headlight and Taillight, and Roof and Upper Pillar), Image Type (2D and 3D), and Vehicle Type – Global Forecast to 2030”

The LiDAR for automotive market is expected to grow from an estimated USD 735.0 Million in 2025 to a projected USD 2,557.3 Million by 2030, at a CAGR of 28.32%, during the forecast period.

The LiDAR market for the automotive division is expected to register high growth rate due to its technological superiority over other available sensors in the automotive industry, such as RADAR and cameras.

Factors such as the rising popularity of autonomous vehicles, government regulations for vehicle safety, and an increase in the adoption of ADAS technology by OEMs are driving the market for LiDAR.

The semi-autonomous vehicle market is estimated to be the largest market for the LiDAR for automotive market, by application

The semi-autonomous vehicle segment is estimated to hold the largest market share of the LiDAR for Automotive Market due to factors such as an increase in the demand for driving safety features, the development of cost-effective LiDAR solutions, and increasing government regulations.

The 3D segment market is estimated to be the fastest growing market of the LiDAR for the automotive market, by image type due to the technological advantages over 2D LiDAR and an expected increased use of autonomous vehicle technology in the automotive industry. The accuracy and performance of 3D LiDAR in autonomous vehicles are far superior to conventional solutions such as RADAR and camera.

The European market is projected to be the largest market in the LiDAR for automotive market as the testing of autonomous vehicles has begun in several countries in the region, such as Germany, U.K., and France. The investment in research and development in the European automotive industry is the largest worldwide, with about 180 automobile facilities across the region. The European LiDAR for automotive market is led by the market in Germany owing to the increased demand for technologically advanced features in the country.

The LiDAR for automotive market is dominated by a few globally established players such as Delphi Automotive, PLC (U.K.), Continental AG (Germany), ZF Friedrichshafen AG (Germany), Infineon Technologies AG (Germany), Velodyne LiDAR, Inc. (U.S.), Texas Instruments, Inc. (U.S.), Leddartech, Inc. (U.S.), First Sensor AG (Germany), Quanergy Systems, Inc. (U.S.), and Innoviz Technologies, Ltd. (Israel).
Read more: http://www.digitaljournal.com/pr/3605528#ixzz52QFv3wte

Thorough and pessimistic article on autonomous vehicles in London

The British Government is spending unprecedented amounts of money on encouraging the development of cars that drive themselves. But the UK is little prepared for the disruptive and potentially devastating changes that such cars could bring to our streets, experts have warned.

While huge amounts of work is being done in the UK and elsewhere on such technology, towns and cities are continuing to work largely as they have with private, driven vehicles – by both governments and private car and tech companies – little is being done to change the cities they will drive around. That could become a problem if autonomous vehicles truly take over, as the government has both predicted and supported.

That’s because little is being done by either the Government or other bodies to ensure that the country is ready to embrace the challenges brought by such technology. Such challenges range from the everyday but significant problems of road space to the more unusual but no less damaging problems of terror and hacking attacks, experts warned.

The Budget laid out in November includes a full £1bn for high tech projects. That includes £75m to be spent on artificial intelligence, £400m for electric car chargers and £100m on clean car sales. All of that will pay for the future where autonomous vehicles are on the streets by 2021, the Government claims. Chancellor Philip Hammond backed that up with a series of public appearances during which he backed driverless cars.

The money is praised by the many experts who fear that the UK, and the rest of the world, needs to prepare for major changes coming to our streets. But it isn’t enough, many experts also say, and the Government needs to reconsider the streets themselves, and how they are able to deal with self-driving cars.

Hammond and his ministerial colleagues haven’t discussed how they see the future of the roads themselves, but have made much of the money they intend to spend and the future they intend that investment to bring about. However, some have claimed that the government’s hope of autonomous vehicles on the road by 2021 isn’t possible – potentially meaning it is failing on both counts.

“Hammond is attempting to position the UK as a hub for automotive innovation, which we definitely can and should be,” said Chris Green, chief risk officer at consumer car management company Regit. “Unfortunately, his completely unrealistic timescale renders the statement relatively useless. While there has been testing by the likes of Jaguar Land Rover and Oxbotica, the UK is very much lagging behind the world’s major players such as Google’s sister company, Waymo, who are currently undergoing level 5 testing.

“When it comes to autonomous technology there is a great deal that needs to be done in terms of regulation, insurance, infrastructure and education before driverless cars can be a legitimate and feasible option for the UK’s roads – and £540m for research and infrastructure will barely scratch the surface.”

Philip Hammond, for his part, is clear that self-driving cars are coming and that people need to prepare for them. He has given repeated warnings to workers that they need to retrain, though said less to town planners and other important people involved in getting cities rather than their workers ready.

“It will happen, I can promise you,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Todayprogramme soon after the Budget. “It is happening already … It is going to revolutionise our lives, it is going to revolutionise the way we work. And for some people this will be very challenging.”

The Government seems to embracing that challenge, encouraging people to get ready for the new world. But that instruction to change mostly seems to be issued to other people – the Government is still being urged to think about the various problems that will arise from the technologies they are investing in.

“It is crucial that we begin to address these issues today,” said Russell Goodenough, client managing director for the transport sector at Fujitsu. “Driverless cars could boost UK productivity by enabling employees to work while commuting, as well as reducing accidents on the road and reducing the amount of land needed for parking.

“The Government’s investment in the technology is to be welcomed, and it’s up to everyone in the transport sector to come together to agree exactly how this technology will work in the UK.”

“My concern is that, as with when private automobiles came on the scene back in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s, there wasn’t really any regulations that came out alongside that, and we just kind of adopted this new way of getting around wholesale, without thinking of the spatial implications,” says James Harris, policy and networks manager at the Royal Town Planning Institute. “How did this change where we live and how we work? We aligned that completely around the car and down the line that led to a million different problems.”

Some of those same problems might already be forming. If we don’t think radically about how to make the most of autonomous vehicles, we might simply use them as a way of continuing the dominance of the individual, personal car – something that is likely to further increase the current problems of public transport and of inequality.

“The dystopian future you could head towards is everyone can afford it substitutes their vehicle for an autonomous vehicle at great expense,” says Harris. “You have the same amount of people in the same number of cars – and with the exception of moving slightly quicker, you have the same problems of car dependent sedentary lifestyles.

“It might even encourage people to live further from work because it’s more pleasurable to commute. But then you’re more likely to have people on the road in their private cars.”

Most public bodies agree that work needs to be done to avoid that nightmare future. But the actual work to get cities ready for that will be expensive and detailed – far more costly both in time and money than the £1bn and four-year budget given to the UK’s autonomous vehicle industry by the Government.

Perhaps the most deep and detailed work going on at TfL is a long way from completion. The organisation has ongoing research being conducted by two students at MIT, due to be completed in summer 2018, it revealed in response to a recent freedom of information request.

For now, the most recent consideration of autonomous vehicles by Transport for London – and apparently the only time TfL has deeply considered such issues, according to an FoI request – was set down in a discussion by its performance panel in July. It noted that the “rapid and accelerating pace of change in technology (from vehicle sensors and connectivity, to analytics and artificial intelligence) and the emergence of the ‘sharing economy’ means that new mobility business models are coming to the transport sector”, and said that its Transport Innovation Directorate was charged with identifying both the positive and negative outcomes of such changes.

It noted that connected and autonomous vehicles could change cities for the better or the worse, and went on to lay out both situations. It didn’t comment on or commit to either.

Potential problems include the potential for easy car travel for people without a car or a license that would then stop them from using public transport; an increased use of them for the last mile of the journey that would discourage people from more active forms of transport; more congestion being caused by more road traffic; and cyber-security, which could bring a whole new dimension to the risks of car travel and security, particularly if vehicles have progressed to full automation where no driver input is required”, including to buses and freight vehicles. But benefits might include easier travel for the elderly and movement impaired; improved road safety; better use of the limited road space in London; and improved transport for everyone, since they could provide a form of transport that is ruled out for most people.

Despite giving a concise summary of the potential problems and benefits – and a less concise round-up of the various ways that London has been internationally leading in the testing of new forms of transport – TfL doesn’t yet seem to have come to any clear conclusion on autonomous vehicles. It will “continue to stay abreast” of new developments, it said.

The Mayor of London’s transport strategy, which was also published over the summer, came to much the same conclusion though offered far greater detail on the principles that will guide that work. It noted in detail the kinds of changes that had happened over recent years and will happen in those to come, and concluded that it “is essential that London is prepared”.

But, like TfL, its proposals mostly focused on ensuring that the right principles were in place before the technological change comes. It set out a series of principles including moving people away from car travel, complementing the public transport system, opening travel to everyone, cleaning the air and ensuring that space was used well. It promised to take “a safety-first approach”, and committed to “adopt an appropriate mix of policy and regulation to ensure connected and autonomous vehicles develop and are used in a way consistent with the policies and proposals of this strategy.

All of this work on both principles and practical application will be important because autonomous vehicles will bring with them a regulatory challenge unprecedented in public transport. If used well that might be a similarly grand opportunity, but it could represent a major challenge too.

“My thoughts on autonomous vehicles in a big city is that you would probably want them managed by a city wide transit authority, like TfL,” says Harris. “But you would want them only to be implemented in the city where they have value.

A prototype of Goodle’s own self-driving vehicle, seen during a media preview in Mountain View, California (Reuters/Elijah Nouvelage)

“So you’d still have bike networks, paths, tubes, but also fleets of autonomous vehicles that could help people get from where a tube line ends, to provide that last mile and get you from Tube stop to your front door.”

That sounds a little like the publicly-owned bikes, emblazoned with the names of banks, that now line London’s streets. And those bikes mostly how such a plan would be a success: with ambitious marketing and coverage, the bikes quickly became an advert for shared, public, common methods of transportation, and a useful example to other cities planning to do the same.

A similar, private plan is more warning than caution. This year, a Singaporean company known as oBike attempted to launch a private plan for something rivalling TfL’s bikes, and looked to stand out with a dockless system that let anyone drop them anywhere, ready for the next person to pick them up.

But the launch was a disaster: the bikes were being thrown down in large numbers outside of Tube stations, in a phenomenon that came to be christened the “yellow bike plague”. Soon after they launched, London boroughs had to seize the bikes and take them off the streets.

Some blamed people, others blamed the company. But what was clear is that large rollouts of new methods of public transportation requires regulation and the clout to back it up – the kind of clout TfL is now flexing in its dispute with Uber. Autonomous vehicles are going to be more disruptive than apps that let you call taxis and pick up bikes; that might excite the tech execs and government ministers leading the charge, but there’s a reason the phrase “travel disruption” tends to be associated with leaves on the line and planned engineering works.

TfL’s dispute with Uber has also shown the enduring power of its brand. A YouGov poll taken soon after the ban was announced found that 43 per cent of Londoners surveyed agreed with the decision to revoke its license, with only 31 per cent disagreeing with it. Positivity towards Uber also dropped from mostly neutral to actively negative in the wake of the ban, according to different data from YouGov.

London might be well placed because it has TfL – it is unusual in having a transportation agency that people like. But it has other problems, including a road system that in many parts is pre-car, not to mention pre-self-driving car; the roads are so thin and the pavements so unclear that it’s likely to make it very difficult for autonomous vehicles to understand where they are.

That, of course, is not the layout of Silicon Valley, where the cars were born and continue to mostly be developed. There, as with much of the US, people drive more and along big, clearly marked highways – the cities are more ready for autonomous vehicles, which might account for why their inhabitants are so set on bringing them to their streets.

“American cities mostly being on a wide grid structure definitely makes autonomous vehicles more suitable there,” says Harris. “And they have a lot more existing segregation between roads and other things. In big cities in the UK, there’s a huge amount more mess and clutter.”

Part of the issue, for instance, is that in the UK cars and pedestrians come up against each other, walking just inches apart. It’s one that autonomous vehicles could solve; allowing them to drive around highways around the city, and giving over streets to pedestrians, would be a way of freeing up large swathes of public space. (Something like that is already happening in areas like Oxford Circus, which is set to become pedestrianised by the end of 2018, even without the influence of autonomous vehicles.)

“If you think about it from the perspective of what’s most efficient, having individual vehicles is not the best use of road space,” says Harris. “It’s walking, cycling, high capacity buses. Autonomous vehicles could change that equation, and I would be a shame if they swooped in as a way of replacing those high capacity ways of getting around, and of walking and cycling, which both have lots of extra benefits.”

But equally the problem of roads and their safety is one that autonomous vehicles could exacerbate, if not used properly. More cars means more of them on those already packed streets, which in turn could bring with it a whole host for people in both cars and outside of them. That is one of the major problems facing cities as autonomous vehicles arrive, and it’s one that could require radical redesign and replanning to actually address.

“This technology could be a way of solving lots of planning-related, town and city-related problems that we have,” says Harris. “You need to think of autonomous vehicles as one part of a much wider transport system rather than in isolation.”

It’s not just simply a question of redesigning the roads, but the entire map that fills in the spaces between. There’d be no need for city centre parking, for instance, since cars could just drive off somewhere else to wait – and so we could redevelop the space currently used for that, either into new housing or into something more ambitious like green space. Our cities could be entirely remapped to make way for new and revolutionary forms of travel, though as ever the simple question of where and how big roads are is likely to dominate the discussion.

As well as the design of cities, the threat of terrorism could undermine the introduction of autonomous vehicles, too. Self-driving cars are vulnerable to hacking, and if they are used to further the kind of attacks that human-operated vehicles have enabled, then the work to get them into cities is likely to be set back immediately.

“With millions of lines of software code, today’s connected cars offer malicious hackers numerous attack vectors,” said Alexa Manea, chief security officer at BlackBerry. “The impact of such a cyberattack could range from traffic congestion and inconvenience to life-threatening danger to drivers, passengers, pedestrians, and innocent bystanders. Developing an effective security framework to combat these threats is a challenging but necessary step towards making autonomous vehicles a reality.”

But as with much of the work on autonomous vehicles, responding to that threat is a benefit whether or not they actually turn up and take over our roads. Dividing pedestrian paths from streets of vehicles keeps people safe and makes cities happier – whether or not those vehicles are being driven by people or by computer chips.

http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/news/autonomous-vehicles-self-driving-car-government-budget-philip-hammond-town-planning-a8119551.html

Australia behind China and Middle East in attitudes towards autonomous vehicles

Ford has released its 2018 Trend Report, with some interesting findings about Australian attitudes to autonomy.

According to the study, only 52 per cent of Australians are ‘hopeful’ about the future of self-driving cars. Although that was on par with Canada and America, both of which returned 50 per cent, it was well behind the Middle East (71 per cent), Brazil (75 per cent), India (81 per cent) and China (83 per cent).

Along with those who aren’t ‘hopeful’ about the technology, there are plenty of people open to autonomy but afraid of associated phenomena like car sharing.

According to the Transport Opinion Survey, conducted by the University of Sydney Business School earlier this year, 25 per cent of people would buy an autonomous vehicle for family use.

Interestingly, only a third of those same people would be willing to let other travellers use the vehicle while it’s sitting idle, undermining one of the biggest potential benefits to autonomy.

These findings aren’t particularly surprising – just read the CarAdvice comments on any story related to autonomous cars – but skeptics are fighting the industry tide.

This year, we’ve seen the first Level 3 autonomous vehicle from Audi, an aggressive push into more self-driving tests on public roads, more production-ready autonomous shuttles and, perhaps most importantly, a steady creep of semi-autonomous driver-assistance systems into run-of-the-mill vehicles. Self-driving is already here (to a degree, at least) and it’s now about how the technology is rolled out.

“I think we agree within five minutes that the automotive industry is now in the biggest transformation process ever. The speed of digitisation, how our vision impacts our business models, the speed of digitisation, how that one impacts innovation in terms of piloted driving, piloted parking,” Rupert Stadler, Audi CEO, said earlier this year, demonstrating how seriously the company is taking autonomy.

Prominent industry figures are also pushing hard for widespread self-driving, arguing autonomy is the solution to the sky-high worldwide road toll.

Think about this: 1.2 million people die globally on the roads every year. It’s like an epidemic. If you had an epidemic of 1.2 million deaths in the world there would be no government that would stop at anything to put out the vaccine,” Robbie Diamond, CEO of Securing America’s Future Energy, told a crowd at CES.

“For each day that we can accelerate connected and autonomous vehicles, we will save 3300 people a day. This is an epidemic, and this [autonomous and connected cars] is the vaccine, and we’re sitting on it.”

So why aren’t the people of Australia jumping on board? Ford’s report might provide some of the answers. In Australia, 53 per cent of people surveyed say artificial intelligence will do more harm than good, while 37 per cent of adults worldwide say technology already does too much of our thinking.

The other prominent argument among motoring enthusiasts, and the one we hear most on CarAdvice, is simple: people like driving, and no computer is ever getting their hands on my sports car.

Richard Fairchild, director of autonomous mobility programs at Aurrigo, argues self-driving cars will do good things for petrol heads.

“I’ll tell you my personal point of view. I drive a 500-mile round trip every single week – it’s 200 miles there and 200 miles back, and then 100 miles of driving in between – without fail, every week,” Fairchild told CarAdvice at the International Driverless Vehicle Summit in Adelaide.

“And if I could have an autonomous vehicle take me from my house to my workplace in that 200 miles – that’s nearly a four-hour journey in bad traffic – then that would be fantastic. Currently, I own a big, diesel car because it’s efficient and it’s comfortable.”

 “Driving on a motorway – it doesn’t matter if you’re in Australia, if you’re in New York or wherever, or if you’re driving in the roads of the UK – it is dull.”

If a self-driving car could deal with the boring stuff, and you didn’t have to think practically when buying a car, how would the conversation change?

“My big thing is ‘you take me to work so I don’t have to drive, and I’m going to sell my car and buy a Porsche, or a Ferrari… well, maybe a Porsche,” Fairchild said, smiling. “Probably a 15-year-old one at that.”

Labour exploitation in cobalt mining (for electric cars)

One of the big changes facing the global transportation industry is electrification.

Big corporations and car manufacturers are ditching combustion engines, with Toyota saying it will have an electrified or hybrid version of all vehicles by 2025.

But there is a dark side to this revolution.

Cobalt is one of the key ingredients added in electric batteries, and more than half of it is currently mined in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Amnesty says children as young as seven work in dangerous conditions in Congo cobalt mines.

“At the present time, you’d have to say that there isn’t a lot of regulation around the mining of cobalt,” says Gavin Wendt, the founding director and senior resource analyst at Australia-based Minelife.

A lot of the cobalt that’s mined is generated from illegally operated mines that employ almost slave labour: underaged workers, illiterate workers, workers that don’t get paid very much … They’re controlled by warlords, and the industry is appallingly run.”

Wendt thinks recent international scandals in the car industry have put pressure on car manufacturers to ethically source the materials needed for their cars.

“We’re seeing more and more … pressure from society to ensure that these commodities are ethically sourced … A very big issue is going to be where this cobalt will come from, and hence companies are looking to source cobalt outside of the DRC as much as possible,” Wendt says.

With 54 percent of cobalt currently coming from the Congo, that goal is still a long way off.

Meanwhile, Wendt says demand for cobalt is estimated to grow by a staggering 9000 percent in the next two decades. This might drive the price of the resource up to the point that electric cars will become too expensive to make economic sense.

“The commodities themselves have to come down in price and that automatically means that more needs to be found,” Wendt says. “In the case of cobalt, of course we’re also talking about potential substitution … actually reducing the amount of cobalt that’s currently consumed in these typical batteries.”

http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/countingthecost/2017/12/cobalt-mining-dark-side-electric-car-revolution-171224130356301.html

An American view on autonomous vehicle safety

There’s a number that is all the buzz these days in the world of autonomous vehicles: 94 percent. That’s the percentage of car crashes caused by driver error. The implication: Once cars become driverless, there will be hardly any crashes at all.

Not so.

As fully autonomous cars become a reality, there will be collisions between them, and there will be collisions with conventional cars. Fewer than before? Yes, but there will be crashes nevertheless.

The speed with which driverless cars are accepted by the public may well be determined by this question: How safe is safe enough?

“Is ‘safe enough’ 10 percent safer than where we are by manually driving?” said Bryan Reimer, associate director of the transportation center at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. “One thing that I think is really going to limit our ability to see this technology proliferate is a societal acceptance on the definition of what is safe enough.”

Without a generally accepted definition of what constitutes a sufficiently safe driverless car, the industry could suffer from setbacks caused by a combination of public apprehension and news headlines.

When a truck backed into a self-driving bus in Las Vegas last month, one headline mirrored many others: “Las Vegas’ self-driving bus crashes in first hour of service.”

When a driver using Tesla’s auto­pilot died in a Florida crash last year, a British magazine used the headline “Tesla driver dies in first fatal autonomous car crash in U.S.” and a later headline in Scientific American lamented “Deadly Tesla Crash Exposes Confusion over Automated Driving.”

“I think it’s important to clear up a possible misconception,” said Robert Sumwalt, chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board, after his agency completed its Tesla crash investigation. “The automobile involved in the collision was not a self-driving car.”

The Tesla’s “Autopilot” system is designed to perform limited tasks and functioned as designed, the investigation concluded. However, the system is meant to augment, not replace the driver. The vehicle’s human driver and his overreliance on the system were at fault, the NTSB concluded.

Surveys show people harbor trepidation about giving up driving, and an AAA poll found that 54 percent of drivers feel less safe even sharing the road with fully autonomous cars.

 Reimer says, “If consumers are looking at robots as being almost perfect, they can’t be.”

They can’t be and they shouldn’t be, a Rand Corporation report says. “Requiring autonomous vehicles to be nearly flawless before putting them on the road could cost hundreds of thousands of lives,” the report says.

According to the National Safety Council, 40,000 people were killed in crashes last year, or about 110 each day. More than 1 million have died since 1990. With the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) concluding that “94 percent of serious crashes are due to dangerous choices or errors people make behind the wheel,” the stage would seem set for fully autonomous cars, which, among other things, constantly see 360 degrees around them.

Except for the politics.

“Unless we have defined how safe is safe enough — and we are in agreement — the nature of politics is that fingers will point at each other,” Reimer said. “If you think about Congress now, everybody’s going to look at everybody else and say ‘I don’t want to be responsible.’ You cause mass pandemonium. That sets the potential viability of these technologies back by decades.”

The U.S. Department of Transportation and Congress are seeking to balance the desire of automakers to develop driverless cars without burdensome restrictions with the need for regulatory guidance. Since several companies have test vehicles on the road, that effort at balance becomes even more precarious as states step in to fill what they fear is a growing federal vacuum.

“Given all the ways in which autonomous vehicles could affect society, it’s possible that regulators, lawmakers and the industry collectively may not be able to deal with all these issues before autonomous vehicles become road-worthy,” said David Groves, a researcher who co-authored the Rand report.

Groves and Nidhi Kalra developed a model to estimate how many lives would be lost or saved in the coming decades under various scenarios of driverless car deployment.

“How important is it that autonomous vehicles are safe when they’re introduced versus how quickly they improve?” Kalra said. “Do we allow them on the road when they’re like teenage drivers or do we wait for them to be as good as professional drivers?”

They present two of the some 500 different scenarios in their paper, along with a template that allows people to enter various elements to create their own model.

In one model, autonomous cars are marketed in 2020 when they are 10 percent safer than the average human. With steady improvement over 15 years — the result of widespread use by the public — they reach the point of being 90 percent safer than humans. By 2070, the Groves-Kalra report estimates, autonomous cars will have saved 1.1 million lives.

In another scenario, introduction of driverless cars is delayed until 2040 because regulations require them to be close to perfect. By 2070, autonomous cars will have saved 580,000 lives, 420,000 fewer than under the first scenario.

“Waiting for the cars to perform flawlessly is a clear example of the perfect being the enemy of the good,” Kalra said.

One measure of the degree to which autonomous cars might help reduce crashes comes from NHTSA’s traffic fatality data, which shows:

•10,497 annual deaths attributed to drunken driving.

•10,111 deaths from speeding.

•3,450 deaths from distracted driving.

•803 deaths from dozing behind the wheel.

As Reimer sees it, “If the goal is to be able to say ‘We need to be able to justify these vehicles are 25 percent safer than legacy systems today before they are market viable at any number great than X,’ hey, that’s realistic. But how are we going to prove it?

“The likelihood of seeing a crash with an automated vehicle is very, very high. The likelihood of someone dying at the expense of a highly automated vehicle is for certain,” Reimer said.

When that moment arises, the question of how safe is safe enough will be addressed once more, this time underscored by a tragedy.

“A major backlash against a crash caused by even a relatively safe autonomous vehicle could grind the industry to a halt,” Kalra said, “resulting in potentially the greatest loss of life over time. The right answer is probably somewhere in between introducing cars that are just better than average and waiting for them to be nearly perfect.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/trafficandcommuting/how-safe-is-safe-enough-to-put-driverless-cars-on-the-nations-roadways/2017/12/10/9a1aa348-d519-11e7-b62d-d9345ced896d_story.html?utm_term=.952a0bf66cf0

Electric Cars in 2040

1.There could be as many as 875 million electric cars in the passenger vehicle sector worldwide by 2040.

2.This projection was made in 2017 by the International Energy Agency, the intergovernmental energy policy organization, in its most ambitious climate policy action scenario (the “Sustainable Development Scenario”).

3.However, astonishingly this 875 million projection would displace only a bit more than nine million barrels of daily oil demand.

 4.In other words, it would displace less than 10% of the current total of 94 million barrels per day.

5.That means even such a large switch to electric cars would not dent global oil demand by much.

6.One reason is that the Sustainable Development Scenario assumes that electric cars would account for just 43% of the global passenger car fleet of 2 billion or so in 2040.

7.The bigger reason is that road freight, aviation, shipping and plastics production are expected to continue creating new oil demand.

8.To meet more ambitious targets that contain climate change’s damage better – such as the Paris Agreement’s 1.5 degree Celsius warming limit – three-quarters of that fleet would need to be electric (and charged by nearly zero-emission power) by 2040.

Sources: The Globalist Research Center and the International Energy Agency

Sectors that benefit from the autonomous vehicle industry

THE autonomous vehicle industry is growing by the second. According to a study from Intel and the research firm Strategy Analytics, the driverless vehicle industry will be cultivate around US$7 trillion worth of economic activity and new efficiencies annually by 2050.

Automated transportation addresses various inefficiencies in the current industry model, including:

Low utilization: On average, cars are used 4 percent of a day, with an available seat-mile utilization of barely 1 percent.

Consumption of finite resources: Cars consume 500 billion gallons of fuel per year, accounting for 45 percent of global oil demand.

Public safety: There are roughly 3,500 fatal traffic incidents per day globally. The Intel study estimates that more than half a million lives will be saved between 2035 and 2045 due to autonomous vehicles’ potential for greater safety. Furthermore, public safety expenditures would be reduced by more than US$234 billion over the same period.

As well as addressing many significant problems which have arisen from today’s auto industry, autonomous vehicles are set to vastly disrupt many industries.

“The industry implications for recasting the global mobility model extend far beyond just the auto industry, affecting large tranches of the economy and the investment landscape,” said Adam Jonas, head of auto and shared mobility research at Morgan Stanley.

Research by Morgan Stanley has highlighted various sectors beyond the auto industry which are set to experience both disruption and opportunity from autonomous vehicle growth.

Original equipment manufacturers (OEM) and suppliers

OEMs and suppliers to the auto industry are set to face new competitors with advantages in software, consumer electronics and cost of capital. Many companies may struggle to recruit and retain the best talent. It is thought the companies with the most superior technology, or quality and scale for key features such as fuel efficiency and safety, will be best positioned for business growth.

Auto dealers

The growth in the autonomous vehicle industry could mean auto dealers stop selling cars altogether, and instead evolve into a 100 percent service model.

Transport sector

Morgan Stanley proposes that autonomous trucks may offer substantial growth and cost-cutting opportunities to fleet operators that can apply optimal technologies to transform their existing networks.

Chemical sector

Producers of lithium are presented with a “chicken-and-egg” problem, where higher demand for electric vehicles cannot be met without an increased supply of battery-grade lithium – yet this supply will not be produced until electric vehicles show greater end-market demand.

According to Morgan Stanley, businesses in this sector will do well from a significant increase in consumer adoption of electric vehicles.

Electric utilities

This industry would benefit from increasing the amount of plug-in charging points, as electric vehicles see a prolific growth in consumer adoption.

The semiconductor industry

Though this industry has benefited from the general digitization of vehicles and driving for decades, the growth in autonomous cars is set to increase this further.

As cars become even more complex, demand for automotive semiconductors will continue to rise steadily and provide a major new long-term growth.

According to research by Mckinsey, between 1995 and 2015 semiconductor sales to automotive OEMs increased from US$7 billion to US$30 billion.

Entertainment

Internet, media and IT hardware-software companies can get creative about how passengers can pass their time in autonomous cars. Commuters spend a lot of time in their cars, with the average driver wasting around 42 hours sitting in traffic jams each year. This presents a powerful opportunity for content creators to fill these hours with entertainment options.

Telecoms and communication

Telecommunication businesses will play a vital role in preparing the roads for automated vehicles. Both mobile and fixed networks will form the foundation for their functionality. The success and viability of autonomous vehicles will be dependent on the availability of reliable and widespread connectivity. Without such, these vehicles will be unable to communicate with other vehicles and their traffic, map and emergency systems.

The increase in autonomous vehicles is presenting many growth opportunities for sectors beyond the auto industry, with just a few mentioned above. As this increase rises, it is inevitable other sectors will be figuring out how they can also come along for the ride.

Source: http://techwireasia.com/2017/12/which-sectors-benefiting-autonomous-vehicle-industry/

Ford says China will lead the world in electric vehicle development

  • Ford executive chairman William C. Ford Jr. said China will be the best market to develop and sell electric vehicles.
  • The Chinese and Beijing governments are making investments and regulations that encourage electric vehicle production.
  • Ford’s research also found that Chinese consumers are less fearful of the potential problems electric cars could introduce than some of their international counterparts.

Once criticized for their lack of innovation, American car companies are making heavy investments in electric and autonomous cars. But Ford executive chairman William C. Ford Jr. thinks China will be the most promising market for the development and sale of electric vehicles,according to the New York Times.

“It’s clearly the case that China will lead the world in E.V. development,” Ford Jr. said on Tuesday while speaking in Shanghai.

This may explain why Ford recently announced a $756 million joint venture with Chinese auto company Zotye Auto to produce and sell electric cars in China. Ford hopes to have 15 models ready by 2025.

Ford is not the only car manufacturer developing an aggressive strategy in China, as General Motors, Daimler, and Volkswagen are making similar investments. They have been encouraged by China and Beijing’s governments, which have put significant resources behind electric vehicle manufacturing and have introduced regulations that mandate car companies sell a greater proportion of electric and hybrid vehicles or get shut out of the world’s biggest car market.

Car manufacturers may also find consumers who are more willing to make the switch from gas to electric-powered vehicles. Ford has indicated its market research points to a consumer base that is less pessimistic about how far electric cars will be able to travel per charge, among other potential concerns.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.sg/bill-ford-says-china-will-beat-us-in-electric-cars-2017-12/?r=US&IR=T

 

BMW expects sales of electric vehicles to increase in 2018 by double-digit percentage

MUNICH (Reuters) – BMW (BMWG.DE) expects its sales of electric and hybrid vehicles to jump next year, its research and development chief said as the premium carmaker races to catch up with rivals such as U.S. electric car pioneer Tesla (TSLA.O).

Sales in 2018 will exceed a 2017 sales target of 100,000 vehicles by a medium double-digit percentage, Klaus Froehlich said at an event, without being more specific.

In the first 10 months of 2017, BMW sold 78,100 electric cars and plug-in hybrids.

BMW, which launched the i3 electric car in 2013, is gearing up to mass produce electric cars by 2020 and aims to have 12 different models by 2025.

Chief Executive Harald Krueger said BMW aimed to keep its return on sales around 8 to 10 percent even with the added costs of developing electric cars.

Carmakers are trying to lower the cost of electric vehicles by investing in the development of affordable but powerful batteries and through modular production systems.

BMW’s Froehlich said he expected such modular systems to benefit the development of autonomous cars as well.

BMW earlier this year teamed up with U.S. chipmaker Intel (INTC.O) and Israel-based camera specialist Mobileye to develop autonomous driving technologies.

 Frohlich said another carmaker was to join them by the end of the year. He said the aim was to have partners from Europe, North America and Asia.

So far, U.S.-based Fiat Chrysler (FCHA.MI) and auto parts makers Delphi (DLPH.N) and Magna (MG.TO) have joined the partnership, along with Germany’s Continental (CONG.DE).

Source: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-bmw-sales/bmw-expects-jump-in-electric-car-sales-in-2018-rd-chief-idUSKBN1DY2UF