US to add features such as blind spot warnings and pedestrian detection
to vehicle crash ratings
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[November 19, 2024] By
TOM KRISHER
DETROIT (AP) — The U.S. government's automobile safety ratings will get
a major update starting with the 2026 model year when regulators add new
driver-assistance technologies and tests for protecting pedestrians.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said Monday that it
has finalized the changes, which were required by Congress under the
2021 bipartisan infrastructure law.
In addition to the five-star ratings for crash tests, the agency will
add four new technologies including pedestrian automatic emergency
braking, lane-keeping assist, blind spot warning, and intervention if a
driver tries to move toward a vehicle in a blind spot.
The new rule also strengthens test procedures and performance standards
for technology that's already included in the ratings such as automatic
emergency braking.
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, whose department includes NHTSA,
said the previous ratings, which went into effect in 1978, have helped
the industry rise to higher safety standards.
The new requirements make sure “that the evaluation of these cars
includes not just the safety of people inside vehicles during a crash,
but how the design of a vehicle could prevent a crash or make it less
fatal for someone outside the vehicle," Buttigieg said in an interview
with The Associated Press.
The agency said that the five-star crash test ratings, which most
vehicles now get, would not change under the new system. But consumers
would also see green check marks on NHTSA's website if vehicles they're
shopping for have the safety features, and they can be assured that the
features meet standards set by the government, Buttigieg said.
Early on, the features will get a pass or fail grade, but later will get
scores so buyers can compare vehicles, he said.
The standards, which will start showing up this coming August, should
motivate automakers to speed up deployment of the features, he said.
Automakers already use crash test ratings to compete for customers, and
Buttigieg expects that to happen with the new features as well.
The safety devices can either be standard equipment or optional, the
agency said.
“We hope that this will move the market in that direction, that
consumers will have another reason to be conscious that these features
exist and then ask whether the car are thinking about buying has those
features,” he said.
The new standards also will strengthen test procedures for safety
features that are already included such as automatic emergency braking,
the agency said. Automatic emergency braking will have to meet tough
requirements and be standard equipment on all passenger vehicles by
2029.
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Evening rush hour traffic fills Highway 50, Jan. 26, 2017, in
Sacramento, Calif. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File)
The agency also will set design
standards to mitigate injuries to pedestrians, following most of the
regulations already in effect in Europe. The standards will set a
minimum threshold for points of impact and injuries to a pedestrian
struck by a vehicle at 25 miles per hour (40 kilometers per hour).
The Alliance for Automotive Innovation, a large industry trade
group, said the updated standards are needed. But for the standards
to accelerate industry investment, they need to be "updated on a
more predictable and frequent cadence,” the association said.
Buttigieg said this is the first of multiple regulations that his
department wants to put into effect before the end of President Joe
Biden's term of office. He wouldn't say what other regulations could
go into effect.
“We’ve been full steam ahead on a number of rulemakings," he said.
"We’ve kept that pace up regardless of what we anticipated in the
election. So you can expect us to continue to sprint through the
tape, especially on rules that we know are going to make a big
difference, that we think will be well-received by the public and
that we’ve put a lot of work into already.”
Cathy Chase, president of Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety,
said the U.S. is still playing catch up to other nations on vehicle
standards. She urged the Transportation Department to approve
automatic emergency braking for heavy trucks, technology to prevent
impaired driving, front passenger and rear seat belt reminders and
other pending safety technologies.
The standards, last updated in in 2008 for 2011 models, have brought
significant reductions in crashes, deaths and injuries, the agency
said. The number of people inside vehicles who were killed in
traffic crashes fell from 32,043 in 2001 to 26,325 in 2021. But
pedestrian deaths rose 51% to 7,388 during the same period, so
improvements are needed, the agency said.
Last year nearly 41,000 people died in traffic crashes nationwide, a
3.6% decline over 2022, according to NHTSA estimates. Fatalities
have declined for nine straight quarters.
But deaths spiked in 2021 with a 10.5% increase over 2020 as people
started driving more as the COVID-19 pandemic started to ease. That
was the highest number since 2005 and the largest percentage
increase since 1975.
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