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February 2019 |
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AV Update |
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From the Editors
It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it
was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness. So
begins Charles Dickens' book A Tale of Two Cities.
For us, the two cities represent the two categories of
Canadian cities as seen through our AV lens. Some cities
have the wisdom to develop transit and transportation plans
that include the impact of AVs. Other cities represent the
age of foolishness and are planning transit and
transportation projects without considering the impact of
AVs -- as though the last part of the 20th
Century and the first years of the 21st Century will
continue for the foreseeable future. Autonomous, connected
and electric technologies are very disruptive, which means
that the past is no longer a good guide for the future. We
know of multiple Canadian cities in both categories -- but
no names!
Before new infrastructure projects are started or existing
ones expanded, it is important that cities assess the
role of AVs in these projects and their impact on ridership,
the business case and design.
Canadian AV News
On February 15, 2019, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
announced a $40 million investment in Blackberry QNX
for further development of automated and connected vehicles.
The funding comes from the $1.26 billion federal
Strategic Innovation Fund announced in March 2017. The
main purpose of this fund is to draw in and support business
investments, by encouraging research and development that
will help with the commercialization of new technologies in
Canada. Blackberry QNX is investing $310 million of its own
funds for this project and expects to create 800 new high
tech jobs as well as maintain the 300 current jobs.
More information is at
this link.
In a big boost for Canadian CAV development, a 1,866-acre
test facility in suburban Ottawa will be officially launched
in a few weeks. The
Federal Government, Ontario and Ottawa are alll stakeholders
in the project. Day-to-day management is spearheaded by Invest
Ottawa, the City of Ottawa’s economic development arm.
The test bed, dubbed Ottawa L5 (site
here),
has 16 Km of track for testing communication
technologies (including 5G) for connected and automated
vehicles as well as a 5.2-km high speed test loop according
to plans on Ottawa L5’s website. Major companies such as
Nokia, Ericsson, Blackberry QNX,
Juniper Networks and IBM will be conducting R&D
at this facility.
More information is at
this link.
CAVCOE's Barrie Kirk was interviewed by the
CBC
regarding his views on the Ontario Government’s announcement
on January 22, 2019 to allow testing of vehicles with no-one
in them and truck platooning on Ontario’s public roads.
Barrie was supportive of this initiative
and called it a step in the right direction.
Barrie also maintained that the deployment process with be a
gradual one. The new rules modify Ontario's 10-year
automated vehicle pilot program that was launched in 2016.
More information is at
this link.
On a somewhat related matter, the National Post
reported on February 13, 2019 that Huawei has
leveraged machine learning, sensors, advanced image and
speech processing to determine if a driver is capable of
driving a vehicle or can override a self-driving or
driverless vehicle. The article states that nine companies
in Canada are engaged in driverless vehicle R&D. Among them
are BlackBerry QNX, Magna, Uber and the
University of Waterloo. More information at
this link.
On February 8, 2019, consulting firm KPMG released
its second annual report on ‘Autonomous Vehicle Readiness
Index’ (AVRI).
This index assesses AV readiness of various countries
based on 25 different criteria.
Sadly, Canada’s ranking has dropped from 7th
place in 2018 to 12th place in
2019. The #1
country is The Netherlands, for the second year running.
Whereas 20 countries were assessed in 2018, this year 25
countries were evaluated. New entrants are the Czech
Republic, Hungary, Finland, Israel and Norway.
More information and copy of the report can be found
at
this link.
The ‘Policy and Planning Support Committee’ (PPSC) Working
Group made up of representatives from Canadian Council of
Motor Transport Administrators (CCMTA), Engineering
and Research Support Committee and the Transportation
Association of Canada (TAC) presented a report to the
Council of Ministers of Transportation and Highway Safety
in January 2019.
The 26-page report titled Automated and Connected
Vehicles Policy Framework for Canada lays out the
fundamental groundwork necessary for development of CAV
technologies in Canada and defines roles and
responsibilities of the various levels of government.
A copy of the report can be downloaded from
this link.
International AV News
Waymo,
the self-driving car arm of Google, is planning to set up a
factory in Michigan entirely dedicated to producing
self-driving cars.
Michigan’s historical role in auto manufacturing was one
reason for choosing this state over others.
The new plant is expected to create up to 400 new
jobs. Waymo will invest $13.6 million to retrofit a
to-be-determined manufacturing facility in the Detroit area.
The state of Michigan offered Waymo an incentive grant worth
up to $8 million.
More information is at
this link.
The UK edition of the AutoTrader has published a
primer on self-driving cars explaining the basic concepts of
how a self-driving car works, levels of automation,
insurance issues, the main players in AV space, etc.
Of note is a list of 32 vehicles that
AutoTrader lists as having some built-in level of automaton.
The AutoTrader article can be viewed at
this link.
Most people think of Amazon as a giant online
retailer. While this
is true, Amazon is also one of the world’s largest logistics
companies employing all modes of transportation for its
distribution and delivery network. As of late, this includes
autonomous delivery robots. Back in 2017, Amazon quietly
acquired a small San Francisco based technology company
called Dispatch. Some of the technologies developed by
Dispatch are now incorporated into Amazon’s delivery robots
dubbed Scout which were used in a pilot project in January
2019 in Snohomish County in Washington State. More
information is at
this link.
Along the same theme, the UK’s
Starship Technologies
has started parcel, grocery and food deliveries using
autonomous robots.
The 6-wheeled robots have 10 cameras, ultrasound sensors,
radar, and GPS to help them navigate. The company has been
actively delivering groceries in Milton Keynes since
October 2018. The service is available through a mobile
phone app. Subscribers pay a monthly fee of £7.99 for an
unlimited number of deliveries. More information is at
this link.
Staying with the delivery robot theme, there are times when
things don’t quite go right with autonomous delivery robots.
Case in point is a delivery robot made by Kiwibot
which caught fire while delivering food at the UC Berkeley
campus in December 2018. Kiwibot had been delivering food on
this campus for the past two years.
More information and photo at
this link.
And a different kind of autonomous robot is being tested by
the UK’s Gatwick Airport for parking visitors' cars
at that airport. The robot named Stan uses forklift-like
arms and artificial intelligence to create up to 50% more
space in a parking lot. Report and video from CNN is at
this link.
In line with many other countries, France has
realized the importance of AVs and has developed a national
framework and roadmap for the development of this
technology. The
French approach has three major thrusts: safety,
demonstration projects and collaboration. The safety
framework will be completed by 2020-2022 and will cover all
types of vehicles with emphasis on public transport
autonomous solutions. Copy of the 96-page report (in French)
titled Développement des Véhicules
Autonomes - Orientations stratégiques pour l’action publique
can be downloaded from
this link.
Simulation
is an essential part of development in many areas of
science, engineering and
technology.
This includes both connected and autonomous vehicles.
The UK firm
rFpro
has developed advanced simulation software for autonomous
vehicles to test and evaluate all kinds of scenarios in many
different settings and environments.
The technology is derived from many years of work in
the gaming and special effect industries. The process is
very data hungry typically requiring
32 GPUs and 32 CPUs for a single experiment and
producing some 500GB of data per second. More information is
at
this link.
Zenuity is an autonomous vehicle joint-venture
between Volvo and its partner
Veoneer.
Recently, Zenuity was successful in obtaining
approval from Swedish authorities for testing its Level 4
AVs on Sweden’s public roads.
In Level 4 mode, there is no need to have a hand on
the steering wheel because -- as the article points out --
successful Level 4 vehicles have the capability of
completing a trip from point A to point B on most roads
without any human touch.
One restriction that the Swedish authorities gave
imposed in Zenuity is that its test vehicles cannot exceed a
speed of 80 Km/h.
More information is at
this link.
The UK’s Department for Transport (DfT) has made
amendments to its
regulations
to allow autonomous vehicles
with no driver to be tested on public roads.
DfT has stipulated that the new regime will be subject to
“rigorous safety assessments”.
The UK’s market for CAVs is estimated to be worth
£52 billion by 2035. More information at
this link.
Automation is not limited to ground vehicles. In
Finland, automation technology developed by
Rolls-Royce has been applied to ferries to make them
autonomous. In
an emergency, the ferry
can be controlled by humans from dry land using
satellite and internet communications.
More information and video are at
this link.
Money flows into autonomous vehicle development unabated.
One of the latest funding rounds was by self-driving
startup
Aurora,
which was founded in 2016 by Chris Urmson (formerly
with Google) and Sterling Anderson (formerly with
Tesla). It was announced on February 7, 2019 that Aurora has
secured a $530 million investment from Amazon,
Sequoia, and others. Aurora has partnerships with
partnerships with Volkswagen and Hyundai among others.
More information is at
this link.
In a similar move, it is reported that Japan’s SoftBank
is investing $940 million into
Nuro,
a Silicon Valley startup developing robotic delivery
vehicles. This is one of the largest such investments for
automated vehicles. Trucking and logistics are an
increasingly an important area of autonomous technology
development as the deployment of driverless systems for
passenger vehicles is looking more challenging than some
advocates initially anticipated. More information at
this link.
And sticking with the funding theme,
TuSimple
- a U.S.-Chinese tech startup engaged in commercializing
self-driving capability for long-haul semi-trucks, is
reported to have reached the Unicorn status with its latest
round of funding for $95 million. The Unicorn status is for
firms achieving a valuation of
$1 billion.
More information is at
this link.
And finally, the January 2019 edition of Harvard Business
Review (HBR) had an article on the economic side of
self-driving cars.
The article focused on whether lower income people will be
better off using a shared self-driving cars (robotaxis)
versus owning an older personal vehicle.
To see the analysis and conclusion of Harvard
researchers, check the article at
this link.
Upcoming AV-Related Events
Feb 28 – March 1, 2019:
Operational Safe Systems for Level 5 Automation (OSS5),
South San Francisco Conference Centre
Mar 11-12, 2019:
Tech AD, Berlin, Germany.
April 8-9, 2019:
Autonomous & Connected Vehicle Europe 2019, Berlin, Germany
April 28 – May 1, 2019:
IEEE Vehicular Technology Conference, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
May 8-9, 2019:
IoT613
Conference, Gatineau, Quebec
May 21-23, 2019:
Autonomous Vehicle Test & Development Symposium Europe,
Stuttgart, Germany
June 2-5, 2019:
Canadian Institute of Transportation Engineers (CITE) annual
conference at the Westin hotel in Ottawa
June 4-6, 2019:
TU-Automotive Detroit conference & exhibition for future
auto tech, Novi, MI
June 9-12, 2019:
UITP
Global Public Transport Summit; Stockholm, Sweden
June 25-27, 2019:
Autonomous Ship Technology Symposium, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Sept 9-10, 2019:
CAV
Canada 2019, a national CAV conference organized by the
Kanata North Business Association, Invest Ottawa and the
Canadian Automated Vehicles Institute (CAVI); Brookstreet Hotel,
Ottawa
Sept 22-25, 2019:
Joint TAC and ITS Canada conference, Halifax, Nova
Scotia
Sept 22-25, 2019:
IEEE Vehicular Technology Conference, Honolulu, Hawaii
Oct 2019:
World Congress and Challenge for Self-Driving Transport,
Dubai, UAE
Oct 21-25, 2019:
ITS World Congress, Singapore
Jan 7-10, 2020
CES 2020,
Las Vegas, Nevada
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AV Update
is a free, monthly roundup of news and analysis in the world of
automated vehicles and their impact on all levels of government
and the private sector.
Chief Editor: Ahmad Radmanesh
Contributor to this issue: Barrie Kirk
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We welcome all comments; please send them
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© CAVCOE 2019 CAVCOE
(formerly the Canadian Automated Vehicles Centre of Excellence)
provides advice to public and private sector
organizations to help them plan for the arrival of self-driving
vehicles
300 Earl Grey Drive, Suite 222,
Ottawa ON K2T 1C1, Canada.
info@cavcoe.com
www.cavcoe.com |
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