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						Driverless vehicle to be 
						tested on UK streets for the first time 
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		 [October 11, 2016] 
		 
		LONDON 
		(Reuters) - A driverless vehicle carrying passengers will take to 
		Britain's public roads for the first time on Tuesday, as part of trials 
		aimed at paving the way for autonomous cars to hit the highways by the 
		end of the decade. 
 The government is encouraging technology companies, carmakers and 
		start-ups to develop and test their autonomous driving technologies in 
		Britain, aiming to build an industry to serve a worldwide market which 
		it forecasts could be worth around 900 billion pounds ($1.1 trillion) by 
		2025.
 
 Earlier this year, it launched a consultation on changes to insurance 
		rules and motoring regulations to allow driverless cars to be used by 
		2020 and said it would allow such vehicles to be tested on motorways 
		from next year.
 
 A pod - like a small two-seater car - developed by a company spun out 
		from Oxford University will be tested in the southern English town of 
		Milton Keynes on Tuesday, with organizers hoping the trials will feed 
		vital information on how the vehicle interacts with pedestrians and 
		other road-users.
 
		 
		“Today’s first public trials of driverless vehicles in our towns is a 
		ground-breaking moment," Britain's business minister Greg Clark said.
 “The global market for autonomous vehicles present huge opportunities 
		for our automotive and technology firms and the research that underpins 
		the technology and software will have applications way beyond autonomous 
		vehicles,” he said.
 
 The pod will operate fully without human control, using data from 
		cameras and radars to move around pedestrianised areas. It was made by 
		Oxford University spin-out Oxbotica, with software developed by the 
		university's Oxford Robotics Institute.
 
 Carmakers Jaguar Land Rover and Ford are both part of driverless car 
		projects in Britain, as major carmakers seek to head off the challenge 
		from technology firms such as Alphabet Inc's Google, which is also 
		developing autonomous vehicles.
 
			
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			A driverless pod is tested in Milton Keynes, Britain, October 11, 
			2016. REUTERS/Darren Staples 
            
			 
		
		But all parties still need to overcome technological and legal obstacles 
		including determining who would be responsible in the event of an 
		accident, with recent accidents involving driving assistance systems 
		raising safety concerns.
 Organizers in Milton Keynes ran a number of exercises ahead of the trial 
		including mapping the town and conducting safety planning with the local 
		council ahead of Tuesday's trial.
 
 The city, around 45 miles (70 km) north of London, was selected 
		alongside three other locations for autonomous technology projects 
		partly due to its wide pavements and cycle path network.
 
 Britain is aiming to be more flexible in its approach to driverless 
		testing than some other major economies, with Germany saying it will 
		require black boxes to be fitted in such vehicles and automakers having 
		to navigate different rules across U.S.states.
 
 (Reporting by Costas Pitas; Editing by Mark Potter)
 
				 
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