Self-driving bus with no back-up driver
nears California street
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[March 07, 2017]
SAN RAMON, Calif. (Reuters) - A pair
of $250,000 autonomous buses began driving around an empty San Francisco
Bay Area parking lot on Monday, preparing to move onto a local public
road in California's first pilot program for a self-driving vehicle
without steering wheel or human operator.
California and other states are weighing the opportunities of becoming a
hub of testing a technology that is seen as the future of transportation
and the risks from giving up active control of a large, potentially
dangerous vehicle.
In most tests of self-driving cars there is still a person seated at the
steering wheel, ready to take over, although Alphabet Inc's Waymo tested
a car with no steering wheel or pedals in Austin, Texas, as early as
2015.
The bus project in San Ramon, at the Bishop Ranch office park complex,
involves two 12-passenger shuttle buses from French private company
EasyMile.
The project is backed by a combination of private companies and public
transit and air quality authorities, with the intention of turning it
into a permanent, expanded operation, said Habib Shamskhou, a program
manager who strolled in front of a moving bus to show that the vehicle
would notice him and react. It stopped.
In a test for reporters, one bus cruised a block-long circuit so
consistently that it created a dirt track on the tarmac.
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An EasyMile EZ10 shared autonomous vehicle is seen during a
deployment demonstration at Bishop Ranch in San Ramon, California
March 6, 2017. REUTERS/Stephen Lam
California legislators late last year passed a law to allow slow-speed
testing of fully autonomous vehicles without steering wheels or pedals
on public roads, with the Bishop Ranch test in mind.
The shuttle buses will test for a few months in the parking lots
before operators apply for Department of Motor Vehicles approval
under the new law. The vehicles are expected to swing onto the local
street late this year or early in 2018.
(Reporting by Peter Henderson; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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