U.S. opens safety probe into autonomous driving system in GM's Cruise
vehicles
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[December 16, 2022] By
David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. auto safety regulators said Friday they have
opened a formal safety probe into the autonomous driving system in
vehicles produced by General Motors' robotaxi unit Cruise LLC.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) said it has
received notices of incidents in which self-driving Cruise vehicles "may
engage in inappropriately hard braking or become immobilized."
The agency said while both issues "appear to be distinct, they each
result in the Cruise vehicles becoming unexpected roadway obstacles."
The safety agency's preliminary evaluation covers 242 Cruise autonomous
vehicles and is the first step before it could seek a recall.
The investigation follows reports of three crashes in which Cruise
vehicles were struck from behind by other cars after the autonomous
vehicles braked quickly.
Cruise is offering limited service in San Francisco with a small fleet
of Chevrolet Bolt EVs.
Cruise said it has "driven nearly 700,000 fully autonomous miles in an
extremely complex urban environment with zero life-threatening injuries
or fatalities.... There’s always a balance between healthy regulatory
scrutiny and the innovation we desperately need to save lives, which is
why we’ll continue to fully cooperate with NHTSA or any regulator in
achieving that shared goal."
NHTSA said it plans to fully assess the potential safety-related issues
posed by these two types of incidents and will review "the commonality
and safety logic of the hard braking incidents" and the "frequency,
duration and safety consequences associated with the vehicle
immobilization incidents."
Last month, Cruise Chief Operating Officer Gil West told Reuters the
company plans to enter a "large number of markets" and scale operations
up to "thousands of vehicles" in 2023.
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The new GM logo is seen on the facade of
the General Motors headquarters in Detroit, Michigan, U.S., March
16, 2021. Picture taken March 16, 2021. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook/File
Photo
NHTSA said the issues "may introduce multiple potential hazards such
as a collision with a Cruise vehicle, risk to a stranded passenger
exiting an immobilized Cruise vehicle, or obstruction of other
traffic including emergency vehicles."
The agency said it has three reports of Cruise vehicles automated
driving system "initiating a hard braking maneuver in response to
another road user that was quickly approaching from the rear. In
each case, the other road user subsequently struck the rear of the
ADS-equipped vehicle."
Cruise said police did not ticket their vehicles in any of the three
crashes.
NHTSA said it has been notified of multiple reports involving Cruise
vehicles operating without onboard human supervision becoming
immobilized, which "may strand vehicle passengers in unsafe
locations, such as lanes of travel or intersections, and become an
unexpected obstacle to other road users."
Cruise in September recalled and updated software in 80 self-driving
vehicles after a June crash in San Francisco that left two people
injured. NHTSA said the recalled software could “incorrectly
predict” an oncoming vehicle’s path. Cruise said it had determined
this unusual scenario would not recur after the update.
GM and Cruise in February disclosed they petitioned NHTSA for
permission to deploy some self-driving vehicles without steering
wheels, mirrors, turn signals or windshield wipers. That petition is
still pending.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; editing by Jason Neely, Emelia
Sithole-Matarise, Chizu Nomiyama)
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