{"id":125003,"date":"2022-02-02T20:59:30","date_gmt":"2022-02-02T20:59:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/fin2me.com\/?p=125003"},"modified":"2022-02-02T20:59:30","modified_gmt":"2022-02-02T20:59:30","slug":"self-driving-car-companies-zoom-ahead-leaving-u-s-regulators-behind","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/fin2me.com\/economy\/self-driving-car-companies-zoom-ahead-leaving-u-s-regulators-behind\/","title":{"rendered":"Self-driving car companies zoom ahead, leaving U.S. regulators behind"},"content":{"rendered":"
Kodiak Robotics founder and CEO Don Burnette said he expects a ‘gradual rollout’ of its autonomous truck driving technology.<\/p>\n
Self-driving vehicle companies from Tesla Inc to General Motors Co's Cruise are racing to start making money with their technology, outrunning efforts by regulators and Congress to write rules of the road for robot-driven vehicles.<\/p>\n
On Tuesday, Cruise said that SoftBank Group Corp (9984.T) will invest another $1.35 billion in anticipation of Cruise launching commercial robo-taxi operations.<\/p>\n
Cruise needs one permit, from California's Public Utilities Commission, to start charging for rides around San Francisco in vehicles with no human driver.<\/p>\n
Cruise, Tesla, Alphabet Inc's Waymo and Aurora Innovation Inc are among many companies aiming to deploy fully autonomous vehicle technology in the United States within the next two to three years, whether or not federal regulators give them a clear legal framework for doing so. Autonomous vehicle (AV) startups and automakers are under pressure to start generating revenue from billions of dollars of engineering investment over the past decade.<\/p>\n
TESLA RECALLING 54,000 FULL SELF-DRIVING VEHICLES THAT MAY RUN STOP SIGNS<\/strong><\/p>\n Proposed legislation to create a national framework of rules to govern autonomous vehicles remains stalled in Congress, despite the industry's lobbying. That has left autonomous vehicle companies free to deploy robo-taxis or self-driving trucks in some states, such as Arizona and Texas, but not in others. Waymo has provided thousands of rides in driverless robo-taxis in Phoenix, though the service remains limited.<\/p>\n "Providing guard rails is helpful, at the federal level," said Chris Urmson, chief executive of automated vehicle technology company Aurora Innovation. "Today we have different regulations across the 50 states."<\/p>\n