TechCrunch News 2024年12月21日
Feds clear the way for robotaxis without steering wheels and pedals
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美国国家公路交通安全管理局(NHTSA)提出了一项新的国家框架,旨在简化无传统手动驾驶控制(如方向盘、踏板和后视镜)的自动驾驶汽车的规模化部署。该指南还要求自动驾驶汽车公司向该机构分享更多的安全数据。该计划分为两个等级,分别针对有和没有人工控制的车辆。NHTSA希望通过该计划和数据报告,更好地应对自动驾驶汽车部署带来的新风险,并最终为自动驾驶汽车的性能制定最低标准。然而,一些行业倡导者认为,该框架为时过早,缺乏独立研究和数据支持。

🚗NHTSA提议新框架,旨在允许自动驾驶汽车在没有传统手动控制的情况下规模化部署,并要求企业分享更多安全数据。

📊该计划分为两层,一层针对配备人工控制的车辆,另一层针对没有人工控制的车辆,NHTSA希望通过数据收集来应对自动驾驶汽车部署带来的新风险。

⚠️为加入该计划,公司需要提交关于自动驾驶汽车“设计、开发和运营”安全性的数据,并定期提交事故报告等信息,这些信息将被公开以提高透明度。

🚦尽管NHTSA希望通过收集数据来制定最低标准,但一些行业倡导者认为,在缺乏足够研究和数据支持的情况下,扩大自动驾驶汽车部署为时过早。

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration on Friday proposed a new national framework that could make it easier for companies to deploy at scale autonomous vehicles without traditional manual driving controls – like steering wheels, pedals, and sideview mirrors. 

The guidelines also require AV companies to share a whole lot more safety data with the agency.

The AV industry has been anticipating NHTSA’s proposal since last year, when the agency first proposed the ADS-Equipped Vehicle Safety, Transparency and Evaluation Program, known as AV STEP. The program’s goal, among other things, was to allow NHTSA to greenlight the sale and commercialization of autonomous vehicles that are not compliant with federal safety standards due to a lack of manual controls. 

Today, autonomous vehicles that have all their manual parts are allowed to operate on public roads without oversight from NHTSA. But any AVs that can’t be taken over by a human driver have to get an exemption from the agency.

Unless, of course, they’re Zoox. The Amazon-owned company has maintained that it doesn’t need an exemption from NHTSA because it has “self-certified” the safety of its vehicles – a claim that the agency is actively investigating.

Zoox, which recently started rolling out its toaster-like vehicles in San Francisco, isn’t the only AV company looking to lose the steering wheel and pedals. Cruise, before it went under, planned to deploy the Origin, its purpose-built robotaxi, at scale. Electric and autonomous trucking company Einride intends to commercialize an AV freight pod that doesn’t even have a cab for a driver, let alone pedals. And Tesla unveiled its two-door robotaxi prototype in October, which it plans to start production on in 2025 or 2026, according to CEO Elon Musk. 

NHTSA’s proposed program is a voluntary one that would give participants “an opportunity to demonstrate their commitment to transparency for their vehicles and operations” by providing regular reporting on safety. 

The AV STEP program has two tiers – one for vehicles built with human controls, with fallback designs that can be managed by humans; and another for vehicles built without such controls. As more of the latter begin to flood public streets, NHTSA hopes the program and data reporting would make the agency better equipped to “address emerging risks associated with their deployment.”

To qualify for the program, companies will need to submit data related to the safety of the “design, development, and operations” of their AVs. Once admitted, participants will be required to submit both periodic and event-triggered reports, like crash reports, to NHTSA – all of which the agency would be at liberty to publish in the name of transparency. 

NHTSA’s call for more data comes as President-elect Donald Trump’s transition team has signaled a desire to quash a Biden-era requirement for car-crash reporting that Musk and Tesla oppose. Tesla has the largest market share of vehicles with automated driving features in the U.S., and as such, the majority of the total reported crashes come from Teslas. Tesla has been targeted in several NHTSA investigations, some of which stemmed from the roughly 1,500 crashes the automaker reported to federal safety regulators. 

It’s too soon to tell whether crash reporting for AVs will be eliminated under Trump’s regime, but NHTSA says it wants to collect such data so it can keep up with the fast-moving industry in anticipation of one day establishing minimum standards for AV performance. 

Some industry advocates say the proposed framework is premature. Cathy Chase, president of Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety, pointed out that the proposal was released shortly after NHTSA issued a set of studies touting the effect of federal safety standards in saving over 860,000 lives from 1968 to 2019. 

“Expanding the deployment of ADS – and without the safety protections provided by FMVSSs – at this time seems premature and lacks independent research and data to support the action,” Chase said in a statement.

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自动驾驶 NHTSA 安全法规 数据透明 行业监管
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