Tesla, rivals get low marks for automated-driving technology
Send a link to a friend
[March 12, 2024] By
Joseph White
DETROIT (Reuters) - Tesla's Autopilot and Full Self Driving technology
and nine other assisted-driving systems marketed by major automakers
received "poor" ratings from the U.S. Insurance Institute for Highway
Safety in a new study released on Tuesday.
The IIHS, a safety research arm of the insurance industry, also said
there is no evidence that Autopilot or other assisted-driving systems
have real-world safety benefits, based on crash data.
"We are able to look at insurance claims data. We have been able to look
at vehicles with and without these (systems) and determine there is no
reduction in claims as a result of these more advanced systems," IIHS
President David Harkey told Reuters.
By comparison, there is evidence that automatic emergency braking
systems cut rear-end collisions by 50% and cut incidents of a vehicle
hitting a pedestrian by 30%, he said.
Tesla and its chief executive, Elon Musk, have said that a Tesla
operating with Autopilot engaged is about 10 times safer than the U.S.
average and five times safer than a Tesla without the technology
enabled.
Federal regulators are investigating nearly 1,000 accidents in which
Tesla's Autopilot was in use. A civil case scheduled to go to trial next
week in California will be the latest test of Tesla's strategy of
blaming crashes on drivers who fail to heed the EV maker's warnings to
pay attention to the road when Autopilot or Full Self Driving technology
are engaged.
Tesla did not reply to an email seeking comment.
The IIHS study rated 14 assisted-driving systems from nine automakers
against standards it developed. The U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration has no formal standards governing advanced-driver
assistance systems, or ADAS in industry terminology.
"There are no federal regulations, nor is there good consistent
guidance," Harkey said. "That was our reason for putting these
safeguards together."
Of the systems IIHS tested, only one earned an acceptable rating: The
Lexus Teammate with Advanced Drive, offered last year on a small number
of Toyota Motor's luxury Lexus LS hybrid sedans.
"Toyota continuously aims to increase vehicle safety," Toyota said in a
statement. "As a part of that effort, Toyota, among other things,
considers performance in third-party testing programs like NHTSA’s New
Car Assessment Program and IIHS’s Top Safety Pick program.”
[to top of second column] |
Model Y cars are pictured during the opening ceremony of the new
Tesla Gigafactory for electric cars in Gruenheide, Germany, March
22, 2022. Patrick Pleul/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
GM's Super Cruise and Nissan's "ProPILOT Assist with Navi-link"
offered on the 2023-2024 Ariya electric vehicle received "marginal"
overall ratings.
"We are evaluating the results from the first-ever Partial
Automation Safeguards test and will continue to work with IIHS in
all matters related to customer safety," Nissan said.
GM said in a statement that Super Cruise "is meant to serve as an
enhancement to the driving experience," not as a safety feature.
Different assisted-driving systems from Tesla, Mercedes-Benz, BMW,
Nissan, Ford, GM, Hyundai's Genesis brand and Geely's Volvo Cars
brand received "poor" overall ratings, although all achieved "good"
scores on certain elements of the IIHS tests, the group said.
"This new IIHS testing methodology does not assess the performance
of the driver assistance systems, instead it focuses on safeguards
to prevent misuse," Mercedes said in a statement. "We take the
findings of the IIHS partial driving automation safeguard ratings
very seriously."
Automakers could boost safety ratings by adopting existing
technology for functions such as driver-monitoring or attention
warnings that achieved "good" scores, Harkey said.
Tesla and other automakers are improving the capabilities of their
systems, the IIHS said. Tesla revised its Autopilot software
following a federal recall agreement, and IIHS will test the updated
system, Harkey said.
"We are certainly going to take in the results of these tests as our
cars and these systems continue to evolve," BMW spokesman Jay Hanson
said on Monday. BMW now offers in certain U.S. models a more
sophisticated driving-assistance system than the one tested by the
IIHS.
The Genesis GV80 SUV that launches in the U.S. this spring will the
first model in the Hyundai luxury brand with an in-cabin camera to
monitor the driver's face and eyes while assisted driving is
engaged. "This enhancement will also be rolling out to future
Genesis products in the coming months and years," the company said.
(Reporting by Joe White in Detroit; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |