Uber suspends autonomous
vehicle tests after test vehicle involved in Arizona crash.
Uber
announced Saturday it is suspending its autonomous vehicle testing in Arizona
after one of its Volvo XC90s in self-driving mode was involved in an accident
in Tempe on Friday. The announcement received wide national attention, with two
network broadcasts, several print dailies, wires, and local outlets providing
coverage. Although no one was seriously injured and there were no customers in
the Volvo, the incident raises bigger questions about the integration of
autonomous vehicles on public roads.
ABC World News Tonight (3/25, story 12, 0:20, Llamas, 14.63M) broadcast
“the test SUV” ended up “on its side” after another “car hit it after failing
to yield to the vehicle.” The CBS Weekend News (3/25, story 7, 0:15,
Ninan) broadcast the car being operated by a human “sideswiped the automated
car after an illegal left turn.” Reuters (3/25, Cherelus) reports there were
two vehicle “safety” drivers in the front seats of the Volvo, the Uber
“standard requirement” in all its autonomous vehicle tests.
The New York Times (3/25, Isaac, Subscription
Publication, 13.9M) reports Uber spokesperson Chelsea Kohler said “We are
continuing to look into this incident and can confirm we had no back-seat
passengers in the vehicle.” In the meantime, “she said Uber had also suspended
testing in Pittsburgh and San Francisco for the day” on Saturday, “and possibly
longer.” The Times points out that Friday’s incident “comes at a difficult time
for Uber,” which has jumped from regulatory show-downs to crisis management
over the past few months – its dispute with state regulators over California
testing, the Waymo lawsuit, Uber’s Greyball program, the video of CEO Travis
Kalanick arguing with a driver, and sexual harassment allegations from former
employees.
The Washington Post (3/25, Overly, 11.43M) reports
“the accident once again raises questions about the safety of autonomous
driving technology and how it will interact with other drivers on the road.” In
spite of the fact that “automobile and technology companies alike are dumping
billions of dollars into the technology with the idea that one day our cars
will no longer need human pilots,” Friday’s accident shows “that future is
still far off.” The regulatory environment is also unstable, but from NHTSA to
Congress to state legislatures around the country the “push and pull between
freewheeling innovation and regulatory oversight that many new technologies
endure” is unfolding. Part of that discussion involves the “debate about public
tolerance for injuries and deaths as a result of self-driving cars.”
The Wall Street Journal (3/25, Bensinger,
Subscription Publication, 6.37M) puts the accident in context of Uber’s wider
strategy, the race against companies like Waymo, which has logged more test
hours on its self-driving cars than any other company, to develop reliably
autonomous vehicles. Uber depends on the development of autonomous vehicles to
reduce labor costs from its drivers.