/ 16 May 2014

Europe drives changes in self-driving car regulations

A Google self-driving vehicle drives around the parking lot at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View
A Google self-driving vehicle drives around the parking lot at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View

A little-noticed amendment to the United Nations Convention on Road Traffic agreed last month would let drivers take their hands off the wheel of self-driving cars. It was pushed by Germany, Italy and France, whose high-end car-makers say they are ready to zoom past American tech pioneers and bring the first “autonomous vehicles” to market.

“Today I am only allowed to take my hands off the wheel to a limited extent. Thankfully the Vienna Convention on Road Traffic has been changed,” said Thomas Weber, head of group research at Daimler and head of development at Mercedes-Benz.

For years, so-called autonomous vehicles have been a futuristic dream pioneered by silicon valley companies such as Google.

But as the technology becomes more affordable, Europe’s luxury car-makers say they are well placed to take advantage of it because of their deeper experience in engineering, manufacturing, marketing and sales. There is no point in waiting while Californian upstarts catch up.

The US state of Nevada passed a law in June 2011 to allow test drives of autonomous vehicles there. Google tested one in 2012.

One up
In August 2013, Mercedes-Benz responded to the Google push by developing an S-class limousine that drove between Mannheim and Pforzheim without any driver input. The 103km stretch is known as the Bertha Benz route, named after the driver of the first ever car more than 125 years ago.

But moving from test drives to marketable products was held back by Article 8 of the 1968 Convention on Road Traffic, which stipulates: “Every driver shall at all times be able to control his vehicle or to guide his animals.”

The amendment agreed last month by the UN Working Party on Road Traffic Safety would allow a car to drive itself, as long as the system “can be overridden or switched off by the driver”. A driver must be present and able to take the wheel at any time.

Provided the amendment clears all bureaucratic hurdles, all 72 countries that are party to the convention would have to work the new rules into their laws. The convention covers the United States, Europe and most major car markets, although not China.

The amendment was submitted by the governments of Germany, Italy, France, Germany, Belgium and Austria, according to the April 17 UN document – showing just how important the new technology is for Europe.

Market leaders
Germany’s premium car-makers in particular have business models that rely on leading the market in vehicles with the most sophisticated features available. They can’t afford to fall behind.

Audi, Mercedes-Benz, BMW and car suppliers Bosch and Continental are working on technologies for autonomous or semi-autonomous cars.

Mercedes has developed technology that can scan the road ahead and behind with cameras and radar, and prompt a vehicle to pull out and overtake a large truck without a driver having to touch the steering wheel.

It now wants to introduce more automated driving features into its cars, such as automated parking, automatic stop-and-go driving in traffic and highway driving functions. Eventually, it hopes to have cars with elaborate self-driving software that can be easily updated – like an iPhone – to take advantage of new technical capabilities or changes in the law.

“We have developed a car that can drive autonomously. Now the legal framework needs to follow suit,” a Daimler spokesperson said. – Reuters, additonal reporting by Tom Miles