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  Google, Uber to jointly promote self-driving cars

Google, Uber to jointly promote self-driving cars

AFP
Published : Apr 29, 2016, 2:59 am IST
Updated : Apr 29, 2016, 2:59 am IST

Google and Uber are part of a coalition unveiled on Tuesday to push for a unified US legal code on self-driving cars as part of a broader lobbying drive to promote that technology.

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Google and Uber are part of a coalition unveiled on Tuesday to push for a unified US legal code on self-driving cars as part of a broader lobbying drive to promote that technology.

Carmakers Ford and Volvo, along with ride-sharing start-up Uber’s rival Lyft, rounded out a roster of five founding members of the Self-Driving Coalition for Safer Streets.

Former US national highway traffic safety administrator David Strickland was named as coalition counsel and spokesperson. “Self-driving vehicle technology will make America’s roadways safer and less congested,” Mr Strickland said in a release.

“The best path for this innovation is to have one clear set of federal standards, and the coalition will work with policymakers to find the right solutions that will facilitate the deployment of self-driving vehicles.”

The US department of rransportation has estimated that self-driving vehicles could help significantly reduce the severity and frequency of crashes, the vast majority of which are caused by human error in this country, according to the coalition. “Self driving cars can help save millions of lives as well as cut congestion in our cities,” an Uber spokesperson said in response to an AFP enquiry.

“That’s an exciting future, and one Uber intends to be a part of.”

Google, Lyft and auto industry executives urged lawmakers last month to help create a regulatory fast lane to facilitate the introduction of self-driving cars.

In testimony at a Senate hearing, representatives of General Motors and auto-equipment maker Delphi touted what they said were numerous safety and environmental benefits of autonomous vehicles.

Chris Urmson, head of the Google self-driving car project, said a consistent regulatory framework is important to deploying those technologies, and that conflicting rules in US states could limit innovation.

Location: United States, California, San Francisco