Self-driving trucks begin mail delivery test for U.S.
Postal Service
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[May 21, 2019]
By Heather Somerville
(Reuters) - The U.S. Postal Service on
Tuesday started a two-week test transporting mail across three
Southwestern states using self-driving trucks, a step forward in the
effort to commercialize autonomous vehicle technology for hauling
freight.
San Diego-based startup TuSimple said its self-driving trucks will begin
hauling mail between USPS facilities in Phoenix and Dallas to see how
the nascent technology might improve delivery times and costs. A safety
driver will sit behind the wheel to intervene if necessary and an
engineer will ride in the passenger seat.
If successful, it would mark an achievement for the autonomous driving
industry and a possible solution to the driver shortage and regulatory
constraints faced by freight haulers across the country.
The pilot program involves five round trips, each totaling more than
2,100 miles (3,380 km) or around 45 hours of driving. It is unclear
whether self-driving mail delivery will continue after the two-week
pilot.
"The work with TuSimple is our first initiative in autonomous long-haul
transportation," USPS spokeswoman Kim Frum said. "We are conducting
research and testing as part of our efforts to operate a future class of
vehicles which will incorporate new technology."
TuSimple and the USPS declined to disclose the cost of the program, but
Frum said no tax dollars were used and the agency relies on revenue from
sales of postage and other products. TuSimple has raised $178 million in
private financing, including from chipmaker Nvidia Corp and Chinese
online media company Sina Corp.
The trucks will travel on major interstates and pass through Arizona,
New Mexico and Texas.
"This run is really in the sweet spot of how we believe autonomous
trucks will be used," said TuSimple Chief Product Officer Chuck Price.
"These long runs are beyond the range of a single human driver, which
means today if they do this run they have to figure out how to cover it
with multiple drivers in the vehicle."
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The TuSimple self-driving truck is pictured in this undated handout
photo obtained by Reuters May 20, 2019. TuSimple/Handout via REUTERS
The goal is to eliminate the need for a driver, freeing shippers and
freight-haulers from the constraints of a worsening driver shortage. The
American Trucking Associations estimates a shortage of as many as 174,500
drivers by 2024, due to an aging workforce and the difficulty of attracting
younger drivers.
A new safety law requiring truck drivers to electronically log their miles has
further constrained how quickly and efficiently fleets can move goods.
TuSimple's tie-up with the USPS marks an achievement for the fledgling
self-driving truck industry, and follows Swedish company Einride's entry into
freight delivery using driverless electric trucks on a public road, announced
last week.
The developments contrast with retrenching efforts by robotaxi companies such as
General Motors Co unit Cruise, Uber Technologies Inc and startup Drive.ai, which
have stumbled in building self-driving cars that can anticipate and respond to
humans and navigate urban areas, an expensive and technologically challenging
feat.
Price said self-driving trucks have advantages over passenger cars, including
the relative ease of operating on interstates compared with city centers, which
reduces mapping requirements and safety challenges involving pedestrians and
bicyclists.
(Reporting by Heather Somerville in San Francisco; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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