'Self-driving' in
spotlight again as China sees first Tesla autopilot
crash
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[August 10, 2016]
By Jake Spring
BEIJING (Reuters) - Tesla said on
Wednesday that one of its cars had crashed in Beijing while in
'autopilot' mode, with the driver contending sales staff sold the
function as 'self-driving', overplaying its actual capabilities.
Tesla said it had reviewed data to confirm the car was in autopilot
mode, a system that takes control of steering and braking in certain
conditions.
The company, which is investigating the crash in China's capital
last week, also said it was the driver's responsibility to maintain
control of the vehicle. In this case, it said, the driver's hands
were not detected on the steering wheel.
The crash, Tesla's first known such incident in China, comes months
after a fatal accident in Florida, which turned up pressure on auto
industry executives and regulators to tighten rules on automated
driving technology.
A 33-year-old programer at a tech firm, Luo Zhen was driving to work
and engaged the autopilot function as he often does on Beijing's
highways, he told Reuters in his first interview with international
media.
Luo, who filmed the incident with a dashboard camera, said his car
hit a vehicle parked half off the road. The accident sheered off the
parked vehicle's side mirror and scraped both cars, but caused no
injuries.
"The driver of the Tesla, whose hands were not detected on the
steering wheel, did not steer to avoid the parked car and instead
scraped against its side," a Tesla spokeswoman said in an emailed
response to Reuters.
"As clearly communicated to the driver in the vehicle, autosteer is
an assist feature that requires the driver to keep his hands on the
steering wheel at all times, to always maintain control and
responsibility for the vehicle, and to be prepared to take over at
any time."
Luo, however, blamed the crash on a fault in the autopilot system
and said Tesla's sales staff strongly promoted the system as
'self-driving'.
"The impression they give everyone is that this is self-driving,
this isn't assisted driving," he said.
Interviews with four other unconnected Tesla drivers in Beijing,
Shanghai and Guangzhou also indicated the message conveyed by
front-line sales staff did not match up with Tesla's more clear cut
statements that the system is not "self-driving" but an advance
driver assistance system (ADAS).
These Tesla owners all said salespeople described the cars' function
in Chinese as "self-driving", a term the company generally avoids
using in English, and took their hands off the wheel while
demonstrating it.
"They all described it as being able to drive itself," said Shanghai
resident Mao Mao, who bought a Tesla Model S last year.
The term "zidong jiashi" appears several times on Tesla's Chinese
portal, which is most literally translated to mean "self-driving".
It is also the term for airplane autopilot, leaving room for
confusion among consumers.
"We have never described autopilot as an autonomous technology or a
'self-driving car,' and any third-party descriptions to this effect
are not accurate," the Tesla spokeswoman said.
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A man looks at Tesla Motors' Model S P85 at its showroom in Beijing
January 29, 2014. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
CHINA WOES Tesla does not regularly announce its sales data for China, where it
has faced tough local competition, and it is not clear how many cars in the
country have autopilot, an add-on feature that costs more than 27,000 yuan
($4,000) extra.
The company struggled to sell its high-tech electric cars in China at first due
to distribution issues and widespread concerns about charging vehicles.
There is no clear regulation on self-driving cars in China as the country is in
the midst of drafting its policy toward the technology. Under current Chinese
law, drivers must keep two hands on the wheel at all times.
China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology did not respond to faxed
questions asking about the legality of self-driving cars, including Tesla's
autopilot function. The Ministry of Transportation did not reply to a request
for comment.
Unsatisfied with Tesla's initial response to his crash, Luo posted pictures and
a video of the crash on Chinese social media platform Weibo describing the
incident and criticizing the company.
The pictures show damages to his blue Tesla Model S and a parked Volkswagen,
while the dashboard camera video captures the lead up to the crash and the car
subsequently stopping.
Luo, who said he had used autopilot for more than a month, said he was looking
at his phone or the in-car navigation at the time of the accident, only looking
up every several seconds - but blamed Tesla's hard sell.
"They use this immature technology as a sales and promotion tactic...but they
don't take responsibility for the safety of the function," he said.
Tesla does provide safeguards. If a driver has not touched the wheel in a
certain amount of time, the autopilot system will remind drivers to place their
hands on the wheel and will automatically come to a stop if drivers do not heed
the warning.
(Reporting by Jake Spring and Beijing newsroom; Editing by Lincoln Feast)
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