Latest News

US House panel will consider legislation to speed up self-driving vehicle deployment

On January 13, a U.S. House of Representatives 'committee' will hold a hearing to discuss legislation that aims to make it easier for autonomous vehicles without the need for human control.

Congress has been split for years on whether or not to pass legislation to overcome deployment obstacles. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is not granting exemption requests by major automakers, but has maintained safety regulations. The current law allows NHTSA?to exempt up to 2,500 vehicles per automaker annually if the company can prove that it would be safe. The Teamsters union and consumer groups have expressed concern about self-driving cars.

In June, major automakers called on Trump to act?faster.

Hearings are planned by the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee to examine several draft proposals, including one that would allow vehicles to be operated without human control up to 90,000. Other proposals will address automaker complaints about obstacles to robotaxi deployment. Automakers, for example, say that safety standards like those requiring steering wheels or rear-view mirrors in vehicles are not necessary for robotaxis.

A bill currently under consideration would prohibit states from establishing rules for autonomous driving systems, while another would mandate that NHTSA establish guidelines for calibrating advanced drivers assistance systems.

Tesla launched a robotaxi service in Austin, Texas last year, with safety monitors, and Alphabet's robotaxi division Waymo is aggressively expanding to new markets. Mercedes-Benz announced on Monday that it would launch an advanced driver-assistance program in the U.S. this year. The system will allow its vehicles to operate autonomously within city streets while under driver supervision.

U.S. Transportation secretary Sean Duffy stated in?April, that a new framework for the department to promote autonomous vehicles will help U.S. automobile manufacturers compete with Chinese competitors.

After a pedestrian was injured by a General Motors vehicle in October 2023, the NHTSA opened several investigations into self-driving cars operated by Amazon.com Zoox and Waymo.

Last year, the NHTSA said that it would expedite reviews of automaker requests to deploy self driving vehicles without human controls. The House of Representatives passed legislation in 2017 to speed up the adoption of self driving cars and prohibit states from setting performance standards. However, the bill failed to pass the U.S. Senate. Reporting by David Shepardson, Washington; Editing and review by Chris Reese & David Gregorio

(source: Reuters)