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United States firm proposes to improve self-driving vehicle exemption reviews

The National Highway Traffic Security Administration on Friday proposed a brand-new process to streamline evaluations of exemptions filed by car manufacturers seeking to release selfdriving vehicles without required human controls like steering wheels or brake pedals.

NHTSA has authority to grant petitions to allow as much as 2,500 automobiles per maker to run on U.S. roads without needed human controls but the firm has actually invested years examining several petitions without doing something about it. Efforts in Congress to make it simpler to deploy lorries on U.S. roadways without human controls have been stymied for many years.

Car manufacturers have expressed disappointment with the company's slow reviews of autonomous cars. Under the law, totally self-driving lorries do not need NHTSA approval if they have required human controls.

The market

faces scrutiny after a pedestrian was

seriously injured in October 2023 by a General Motors system Cruise lorry. NHTSA has actually opened a variety of investigations into self-driving vehicles consisting of

Cruise

, Alphabet's

Waymo

and

Amazon.com's Zoox

.

The Alliance for Automotive Development, representing GM, Toyota, Volkswagen, Hyundai and other major automakers, said the proposal will provide a. path to significantly expand the variety of commercial AVs. operating in the U.S. We urgently require a regulative framework. for AVs in the U.S., so we do not deliver leadership to China and. other nations.

Reuters and other

outlets have actually reported that President-elect

Donald Trump wishes to reduce implementation barriers for. self-driving automobiles. Tesla CEO Elon Musk, a close adviser to. Trump, stated in October the

car manufacturer would roll out driverless

ride-hailing services in 2025.

NHTSA in

October opened an examination

into 2.4 million Tesla vehicles equipped with full. self-driving (FSD) after four reported collisions, including a. 2023 deadly crash.

In 2018, GM petitioned NHTSA to deploy approximately 2,500 cars. without steering wheels or brake pedals on U.S. roadways. In 2020,. GM withdrew the petition.

GM in 2022

again looked for NHTSA approval to release automobiles

without human controls. GM withdrew the petition in October. and

revealed this month

it would exit the Cruise robotaxi business.

Ford

last year withdrew its self-driving petition

submitted in July 2021 with NHTSA, citing its decision to close. its self-driving venture Argo AI in 2022.

(source: Reuters)