Need for nimble guidelines

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Need for nimble guidelines

THE top US vehicle safety regulator said on Wednesday the Government needed to be more nimble in designing rules for self-driving vehicles.

The industry “is on version 238.32 by the time we get regulations out,” National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) administrator Mark Rosekind said during an appearance at an industry conference in suburban Detroit.

US Department of Transportation guidelines expected in July would offer different approaches to oversight of self-driving, or autonomous, vehicle technologies, Mr Rosekind said.

Regulations that remain static for years “will not work for this area,” Mr Rosekind said.

“We will have something different in July.”

Autonomous driving technology does not have to be perfect to be acceptable, Mr Rosekind suggested.

“I’d say start at two times” better than conventional vehicles, he said.

Current US highway deaths are equivalent to “a 747 crashing every week for a year … It’s unacceptable.”

Mr Rosekind said he was aware of a proposal by Tesla Motors Inc to make available to the Government its data from vehicles equipped with an autopilot self-driving feature for the highway.

“We’re looking to see what the offer might be,” Mr Rosekind said.

“If the offer is there, we’re going for it.”

In March, the NHTSA said significant legal hurdles must be cleared before self-driving cars without steering wheels and gas pedals can be sold, but there were relatively few legal hurdles in deploying self-driving cars with human controls.