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June 2019 |
AV Update |
From the Editors
Within the AV ecosystem,
passenger vehicles generally get
the most attention. What is
often overlooked is the
significant potential of
automated vehicles for local
delivery, long distance freight,
and pilotless electric planes
for short- to medium-distances.
There are similarities in the
underlying technologies in all
of these. They all need various
sensors, artificial
intelligence, position,
navigation, and detect-and-avoid
strategies to avoid other
vehicles.
This issue of
AV update includes items on all
of the above.
Canadian AV News
Canadian Standards
Association operating as CSA
Group with support from
Transport Canada’s program
to Advance Connectivity and
Automation in the Transportation
System (ACATS) is engaging
stakeholders to develop
standards and guidelines,
contribute to international
standards development, and
develop a forward-looking
standardization roadmap. These
activities will help support the
safe, secure and efficient
deployment of CAVs across
Canada. To guide this process,
CSA Group has convened a
Connected and Automated Vehicle
Advisory Council (CAVAC) which
will review the codes and
standards landscape and
formulate strategy for
developing best practices,
guidelines, and standards for
CAVs. CAVCOE's Barrie Kirk is a
member of CAVAC and the first
meeting was held in May. This
should be a very interesting and
important project.
Transport Canada
organized and hosted a Forum
on Low-Speed Automated Shuttles
in June 2019. The presenters and
attendees were a who's who of
stakeholders involved in this
space, including shuttle
developers / manufacturers,
service providers / operators,
representatives from all three
levels of government, and a
representative from CNIB.
CAVCOE's Barrie Kirk and
Marie-France Laurin were also
there. The presentations and
discussions were excellent and
described previous pilots,
current activities and future
trends. For us, the most useful
takeaways were the comments from
multiple speakers on the best
practices for planning and
deploying pilot projects.
It is often predicted that AVs
will make traffic congestion
worse once they go mainstream.
Some experts at the
Victoria Transport Policy
Institute in B.C., the
University of Waterloo and
others appear to agree with this
point of view. Some even go so
far as to say that communicating
AVs could conspire together to
cause congestion to avoid paying
for parking! More
information is at
this link.
On June 12, 2019, the Globe &
Mail published an article
titled the shift to a
self-driving, electric future
may not be quite so automatic.
The article cites some
transportation modelling work
conducted at the University of
Waterloo suggesting the
optimistic forecasts for the
widespread acceptance of
electric and self-driving cars
by the public may not
materialize. The issue boils
down to people’s habits about
how they use the transportation
system and their resistance to
radical change. The
article can be viewed at
this link.
Caliber Data Labs is a
Silicon Valley startup with an
engineering office in Canada
(Vancouver). This company
develops the picks and shovels
for the AV industry. These
include workflow and
infrastructure tools for data
collection, enrichment,
annotation, and model deployment
by utilizing the latest best
practices in production-ready AI
and machine learning. More
information is at the company
website at
this link. Also check a
recent article by Caliber titled
What makes vehicles "smart"?
at
this link or at
this link.
As we mentioned above,
automation is not limited to
ground vehicles only.
CN Rail has adopted
automated technologies that can
save it up to $100 million per
year in its operations. A
typical rail-car inspection
takes about two minutes to
completer by a mechanic shining
a flashlight on a car’s
undercarriage to spot defects in
need of repair. New automated
inspection portal using high
resolution cameras and
artificial intelligence can
evaluate 120 cars in the same
time it takes a worker to check
a single car. CN has already
installed four of these
automated systems in its network
in Canada with more planned in
the near future. CN is
also using an automated system
using LiDAR for inspecting the
tracks and ties at normal
operating speeds. More
information at
this link.
International AV News
Postmates is a major food
and goods delivery company based
in California. It has been in
operation since 2011 and has
presence in nearly 3,000 U.S.
cities. It has now designed its
own delivery robot called ‘Serve’
to complement its large number
of conventional vehicles with
human drivers. Serve can
carry 50 lbs (22.6 Kg) and go 30
miles (48.2 Km) on a single
charge. Customers interact with
Serve using a touchscreen
and cameras. More information is
at
this link.
In a similar move, Domino’s
Pizza announced a
partnership with delivery robot
specialist – Nuro to use
Nuro’s R1 delivery vehicles to
deliver pizza in selected areas
of Houston later this year.
Nuro has also been using the R1
to deliver groceries to
residents of Scottsdale,
Arizona, and more recently,
Houston. More information is at
this link.
The United States Postal
Service (USPS) is running a
pilot project with self-driving
truck startup TuSimple to
evaluate delivering mail and
packages using self-driving
trucks. The pilot project
operates between Phoenix and
Dallas covering a distance of
over 2,100 miles (3,380 km) or
around 45 hours of driving. More
information is at
this link.
Many surveys have been conducted
to gauge people’s attitudes
towards autonomous vehicles.
One of the latest was released
on June 4, 2019 by the U.S.
engineering firm HNTB.
Over 1,000 Americans were
surveyed in this study.
Respondents had the most concern
over liability in collisions,
with 56% identifying the issue
as a point of concern.
Cybersecurity, or the possible
hacking of the vehicles, came in
at a close second at 53%. People
also expressed concern about the
initial costs of updating
infrastructure for the vehicles,
equal access to them and
continued funding. More
information is at
this link. The survey
results can be viewed at HNTB’s
website at
this link.
Gatik is another AV
startup focused on short-haul
logistics defined as a range of
200 miles (322 Km). Gatik’s AV
technology is designed to fill
the gap between automated
18-wheeler (Class 8) trucks
suited for highways and small
delivery robots designed to
operate on sidewalks. Gatik has
partnered with Walmart to
test its automated vehicles and
technologies. Gatik claims that
goods can be transported up to
50% less expensively in city
environments between locations.
More information is at
this link.
Ride-hailing company Lyft
has reported that it has carried
about 50,000 passengers in its
autonomous vehicle fleet in Las
Vegas in the first six months of
2019. This makes Lyft the
largest commercial self-driving
car operator in the U.S.. Lyft
has a fleet of 30 BMW 540i in
Las Vegas which are fitted with
sensors, controls and software
by technology company Aptiv.
Lyft also states that passengers
gave their automated ride an
average rating of 4.97 out of
5. More information is at
this link.
In addition to ground vehicles,
automated vehicles also include
air and marine vehicles. In
partnership with XPRIZE
Foundation, Shell Oil
had sponsored a US$7 million for
Advancements in Autonomous
Ocean Exploration. On May
31, 2019, XPRIZE announced that
the US$4 million first prize was
won by GEBCO-NF
(International). The winning
team integrated existing
technologies and its
ocean-mapping expertise to
develop a robust and low-cost
unmanned surface vessel (SeaKIT)
that allows for rapid seabed
visualization. The ultimate goal
is to complete comprehensive
mapping of the ocean floor by
2030. More information is at
this link.
Using machine learning
techniques, MIT
researchers have simplified the
way an AV can navigate
unfamiliar roads. Traditional
navigation systems process data
from sensors through multiple
systems to achieve localization,
mapping, object detection,
motion planning, and steering
control. The MIT technique
trains the machine learning
algorithm on how a human driver
steers the vehicle on a typical
roadway. Once trained, the
vehicle can then navigate
unfamiliar roads based on what
it has learned from the human
driver. More details are at
this link.
Transportation futurists -- and
science fiction writers -- have
long dreamed of ‘flying cars’ as
an alternative to automobiles.
Many firms are attempting to
make this dream come true. Now,
ITS America has announced
plans to run demonstrations of
electric vertical takeoff and
landing vehicles (eVTOLs) at
the ITS World Congress in
Los Angeles in 2020. ITS
America predicts that such
vehicles could be in public use
by the time the Olympic Games
arrives in LA in 2028. More
information is at
this link.
Aurora Innovation, a
leading AV company headed by AV
industry veteran Chris Urmson
continues to be in the
headlines. Fiat Chrysler
Automobiles (FCA) has now
formed a partnership with Aurora
to incorporate Aurora’s Level 4
self-driving technology into
FCA’s commercial vehicles.
Aurora also has partnerships
with VW and Hyundai.
In another development, Aurora
acquired leading LiDAR
manufacturer Blackmore
Sensors for an undisclosed
sum. More information on the FCA
partnership is at
this link and on Blackmore
Sensors
here.
Uber has had a long
partnership with Volvo
for its AV program. Uber has
now announced a third-generation
version of its self-driving car,
developed in partnership with
Volvo. The new XC90 SUV will be
built with Uber’s self-driving
technology at the factory level,
instead of needing to be
retrofitted like previous
versions of the car. To make
the new vehicles safer, they
will have multiple redundant
backup systems for critical
systems such as steering,
braking, and battery power. More
information is at
this link.
Upcoming AV-Related Events
July 15-18, 2019 AUVSI
Automated Vehicle Symposium,
Orlando, Florida
Sept 9-10, 2019:
CAV Canada 2019, a national CAV
conference organized by the Kanata
North Business Association, Invest
Ottawa and CAVCOE; 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 15-16, 2019:
ITS (UK) Summit, Coventry,
England
Oct 2019:
World Congress and Challenge for
Self-Driving Transport, Dubai,
UAE
Oct 21-25, 2019:
ITS World Congress, Singapore
Oct 30-Nov 1, 2019:
Unmanned Canada 2019, organized
by Unmanned Systems Canada;
Ottawa, Canada
Nov 26-27, 2019
The Future of Transportation World
Conference, Vienna,
Austria
Jan 7-10, 2020
CES 2020, Las Vegas NV
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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
To subscribe, click
here.
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We welcome all comments; please
send them
here
© CAVCOE 2019
CAVCOE
(formerly the Canadian Automated
Vehicles Centre of Excellence)
provides advice to public
and private sector organizations
to help plan for the arrival of
self-driving vehicles
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