Economics, politics stall driverless technology

The technology that gives cars superpowers to see around corners and through walls won't be on the first self-driving rides hitting the road in the next few years.

Vehicle-to-vehicle communication systems, known as V2V, are regarded as essential for fully automated travel, which could dramatically reduce traffic fatalities from around 40,000 in the United States last year. The technology enables cars to send signals back and forth to one another, improving their ability to foresee potential collisions and avert them.

Despite its promise, the technology is going nowhere fast. A push by regulators during the Obama administration to speed V2V to market has stalled under the Trump administration. Without rules requiring it, automakers including Ford Motor Co. are holding off on deploying $350-per-vehicle systems that aren't effective unless most cars have it.

"Unless it gets mandated, nobody is going to put it on their cars," said Glen De Vos, chief technology officer at Delphi Automotive Plc, a supplier of autonomous-driving systems. "As we meet with regulators, we continue to pound the drum and tell them these early-warning systems in V2V communications have huge safety benefits."

The race is on to get self-driving cars on the road. General Motors Co., Tesla Inc., Daimler AG, Alphabet Inc.'s Waymo and others have promised autonomous models will hit the highway over the next few years. The first ones -- expected to be robot-taxis, commuter shuttles and driverless delivery vehicles -- will be guided by sensors embedded on board the cars. Without V2V, the views from those cameras, ultrasonic and laser-radar sensors only go as far as the eye can see.

"V2V is a much smoother, much more human-like ride," said De Vos, whose company announced a partnership last week with BlackBerry Ltd. to create an operating system for Delphi's low-cost self-driving car system.

V2V transponders rely on Wi-Fi and may eventually use 5G cellular signals. They aren't constrained by obstacles like neighboring trucks or buildings. Traffic lights embedded with the communication device let cars know exactly when they switch from green and yellow to red.

"This connectivity is like your car's sixth sense," said Huei Peng, director of the University of Michigan's Mcity autonomous test track, who demonstrated the technology to Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao earlier this month.

Achieving the highest level of automation -- what auto engineers call Level 5 autonomy -- requires V2V, said Kay Stepper, vice president and regional head of automated driving for German supplier Robert Bosch LLC. On-board sensors on current driverless cars can only sustain Level 4 autonomy, where vehicles travel in restricted areas or under limited conditions.

A self-driving vehicle "has to be able to deal with any traffic situation it's thrown into," Stepper said. "That's why we need V2V."

An Obama administration proposal to equip all new cars with V2V transponders has been put on the back burner by the Trump administration. After having eased federal guidelines for testing autonomous autos and moving to slash rules elsewhere, industry executives say it's unlikely the administration will mandate the technology.

Officials from the Transportation Department declined to discuss the status of V2V regulations at the event earlier this month where Chao unveiled updated U.S. autonomous testing guidelines. Chao suggested state and local governments bear responsibility for deploying communication devices in traffic lights and road signs, although she said Trump's plan to rebuild infrastructure will include federal incentives to encourage new tech.

"There will be a competitive process in which those projects that have greater innovation and are more forward looking will have a larger share of our federal dollars," Chao said. "The technology will determine the trend."

For now, V2V is mired in regulatory review. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration hasn't signaled its next step on the proposed mandate, which has been supported by safety advocates, automakers including GM, and suppliers trying to sell the systems.

The National Transportation Safety Board, which recently said shortcomings in Tesla's Autopilot system contributed to a fatal 2016 crash, reiterated its recommendation made to NHTSA three years ago that it require V2V technology.

Free-market groups and other carmakers, including Tesla, have criticized a mandate in part because it could force a particular V2V technology on the industry while ignoring newer alternatives.

The chasm could give the Trump administration cover to abandon the rule, as it has other Obama-era initiatives, according to Marc Scribner, a senior fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, a free-market think tank in Washington.

"The only action I can see would be a formal withdrawal of the rule," Scribner said.

The Obama administration's proposal had set a timeline to install V2V technology on all cars, sport utility vehicles and light trucks by 2023, using the same federal safety standards dictating that autos have rear-view mirrors and brake lights.

"But this is now in the slow lane," said Peng, the director at University of Michigan's test track. "I have no idea when it will happen."

Some automakers are still eager to deploy the technology. GM outfitted its Cadillac CTS model with V2V communications this summer, hoping it would spur others to follow. No one has yet.

"We really do need a little help from the government," said Matthew Kirsch, GM's engineering group manager for automated driving and active safety, who has been lobbying federal and state regulators to gain support for the technology.

Ken Washington, Ford's chief technology officer, called V2V "very important to safety," but said that "everybody has to do it."

A challenge for proponents of V2V is the dearth of consumer demand for technology that doesn't work until it's widespread on the roadways. Auto companies likely would have to bear the expense of outfitting their cars with communication transponders.

"It's all about cost," said Kristin Schondorf, executive director of automotive and transportation mobility at EY consultants. "At the moment, there is no logical reason for a customer to pay money to put that on their car. So the return on investment is zero" for the companies.

Rollout is another roadblock for V2V. With more than 250 million cars on the road in the United States -- and 1.2 billion worldwide -- it would take decades to outfit every vehicle with the technology. The first year of a federal mandate, new models embedded with the technology would represent only about 7 percent of cars on U.S. roads.

That's why the first deployments of V2V could come in commercial or government applications. Cities may decide to embed the devices in their traffic lights and public buses. Delivery companies might embed transponders in their trucks and in roadway signs and signals along heavily traveled routes.

But even those limited deployments will require rules of the road from regulators. Until that happens, V2V's future remains in doubt.

"It makes a lot of sense, but it seems pretty stalled," said Mark Wakefield, head of the automotive practice at consultant AlixPartners. "It really has to be mandated to get the full safety benefit. At this point, I'd say the jury is out on V2V."

Information for this article was contributed by Alan Levin of Bloomberg News.

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