Login

U.S. Wants To Remove Unnecessary Barriers To Self-Driving Vehicles

NHTSA wants comments on what research it needs to conduct before deciding whether to eliminate or rewrite regulations, which could take years to complete as advocates are pushing Congress to act.
Calendar-icon

By Reuters

clock-icon

1 mins read

Calendar-icon

Published on October 30, 2017

Follow us on

google-news-icon
Story

Highlights

    The U.S. National Highway Traffic-Safety Administration said Friday it is looking for input on how it can remove regulatory roadblocks to self-driving cars. The auto safety agency said in a report that it wants to find any "unnecessary regulatory barriers" to self-driving cars "particularly those that are not equipped with controls for a human driver." The agency also wants comments on what research it needs to conduct before deciding whether to eliminate or rewrite regulations. But it could take the agency years to complete the research and finalize rule changes, and advocates are pushing Congress to act.

    Also Read: Driverless Cars May Let You Choose Who Survives A Crash

    NHTSA said in a statement it plans to issue a formal notice in the "near future requesting comment" on the hurdles. The agency hopes to make the notice public by the end of November.

    Automakers must meet nearly 75 auto safety standards, many of which were written with the assumption that a licensed driver will be in control of the vehicle. The agency said last year that current regulations pose "significant" regulatory hurdles to vehicles without human controls.

    In early October, a U.S. Senate committee unanimously gave the green light to a bill aimed at speeding the use of self-driving cars without human controls and would allow the agency to waive requirements.

    Also Read: Germany Draws Up Rules Of The Road For Driverless Cars

    General Motors Co, Alphabet Inc, Ford Motor Co and others have lobbied for the landmark legislation, while auto safety groups urged more safeguards and have pledged to keep fighting for changes.

    The Senate Commerce Committee approved the bill, and the U.S. House passed a similar measure last month. Automakers would be able to win exemptions from NHTSA for safety rules for up to 80,000 vehicles annually within three years.

    Under the Senate measure, NHTSA would have to write permanent rules on self-driving cars within a decade.

    (Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

    © Thomson Reuters 2017

    (This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

    Stay updated with automotive news and reviews right at your fingertips through carandbike.com's Google News

    Related Articles

    Latest News