Uber suspends
self-driving car program after Arizona crash
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[March 27, 2017]
By Gina Cherelus
(Reuters) -
Uber
Technologies Inc [UBER.UL] suspended its pilot program for driverless
cars on Saturday after a vehicle equipped with the nascent technology
crashed on an Arizona roadway, the ride-hailing company and local police
said.
The accident, the latest involving a self-driving vehicle operated by
one of several companies experimenting with autonomous vehicles, caused
no serious injuries, Uber said.
Even so, the company said it was grounding driverless cars involved in a
pilot program in Arizona, Pittsburgh and San Francisco pending the
outcome of investigation into the crash on Friday evening in Tempe.
"We are continuing to look into this incident," an Uber spokeswoman said
in an email.
The accident occurred when the driver of a second vehicle "failed to
yield" to the Uber vehicle while making a turn, said Josie Montenegro, a
spokeswoman for the Tempe Police Department.
"The vehicles collided, causing the autonomous vehicle to roll onto its
side," she said in an email. "There were no serious injuries."
Two 'safety' drivers were in the front seats of the Uber car, which was
in self-driving mode at the time of the crash, Uber said in an email, a
standard requirement for its self-driving vehicles. The back seat was
empty.
Photos and a video posted on Twitter by Fresco News, a service that
sells content to news outlets, showed a Volvo SUV flipped on its side
after an apparent collision involving two other, slightly damaged cars.
Uber said the images appeared to be from the Tempe crash scene.
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A self-driven Volvo SUV owned and operated by Uber Technologies Inc.
is flipped on its side after a collision in Tempe, Arizona, U.S. on
March 24, 2017. Courtesy FRESCO NEWS/Mark Beach/Handout via REUTERS
When Uber launched the pilot program in Pittsburgh last year, it said
that driverless cars "require human intervention in many conditions,
including bad weather." It also said the new technology had the
potential to reduce the number of traffic accidents in the country.
The accident is not the first time a self-driving car has been involved
in a collision. A driver of a Tesla Motors Inc Model S car operating in
autopilot mode was killed in a collision with a truck in Williston,
Florida in 2016. A self-driving vehicle operated by Alphabet Inc's
Google was involved in a crash last year in Mountain View, California,
striking a bus while attempting to navigate around an obstacle.
The collision comes days after Uber's former president Jeff Jones quit
less than seven months after joining the San Francisco-based company,
the latest in a string of high-level executives who have departed in
recent months.
In February, Alphabet's Waymo self-driving car unit sued Uber and its
Otto autonomous trucking subsidiary, alleging theft of proprietary
sensor technology.
(Reporting by Gina Cherelus in New York; Editing by Frank McGurty and
Bill Rigby)
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