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January 2020 |
We think that
automated sidewalk snow plows are an idea whose
time has come. We therefore start this issue
with some announcements on this subject from
CAVCOE, including a big welcome to two new
people on our team:
We are launching the
Canadian Automated Snow Plow Initiative
(CASPI). This is a new association with
deliverables that include the student snow plow
competition, a suite of research studies, work
on technical standards, and a 1-day
workshop/conference in Toronto, probably in
January 2021.
Linked to this, I am
pleased to announce that Glenn Martin is
CASPI's COO. Glenn most recently served as
Executive Director, Unmanned Systems Canada.
Over the past 20 years, Glenn has been
progressively responsible for strategic and
operational leadership of provincial and
national not-for-profit associations, excelling
in advocacy and driving member programs.
The student snow plow competition is returning
in May 2020 at the Ottawa L5 CAV test
facility. It is now called the 2020 Canadian
Automated Snow Plow Competition and is being
organized by CASPI.
I am also pleased to
announce that David Mosley is the Project
Manager for the competition. David is certified
as a Project Management Professional (PMP) and
holds an MBA from the University of Ottawa's
Telfer School of Management. He has held
senior management positions with Canada Post,
NorthVu Systems and Nortel Networks.
He has also provided governance oversight as a
member of the Board of Directors for both
private sector and charity organizations.
Barrie Kirk, CASPI's CEO, extends a big
welcome to David and Glenn.
Canadian AV News
Many announcements were made at the 2020 CES
event in Las Vegas. One of these was
BlackBerry’s announcement that it has
integrated Cylance ML Security Solution
into its QNX software suite for
autonomous vehicles. BlackBerry acquired Cylance
in February 2019 for US$1.4 billion. Cylance has
been described as “the first company to apply
artificial intelligence, algorithms, and machine
learning to cyber security. BlackBerry says QNX
is being used in over 150 million vehicles today
world-wide. In parallel with the Cylance
announcement, BlackBerry also announced a new
partnership with
Damon Motorcycles, which will
integrate QNX safety technology into
motorcycles. More information is at
this link.
Along with other car and tech companies,
Canada’s Magna International Inc. is
damping down expectations for the near future
deployment of autonomous vehicles. To this end,
Magna is planning to scale back its two-year
partnership with Lyft Inc. to co-develop
self-driving technology. According to Magna’s
CEO, Magna now sees fully self-driving systems
as a longer-term, expensive prospect and will
shift focus to driver-assist systems with more
reasonable timelines. Magna will focus more on
near-term programs like its front and rear
cameras and some surround view systems, as well
as advanced radar systems. More information is
at
this link.
Editor's comment: the problem with many
forecasts CAV deployments is that the CAV
ecosystem is not homogeneous and deployments for
different use cases will happen at different
times. Many commentators do not make this
distinction. Low-speed CAVs such as shuttles are
already in commercial service now. Some OEMs
forecast Level 4 cars in the early 2020s. We and
many others forecast that Level 5 cars, defined
as go anywhere, anytime, in almost any weather,
will not be here until the 2030s.
With the growing prominence of Connected &
Autonomous Vehicles (CAVs) and the increasing
popularity of electric vehicles, new skill sets
are needed by the workforce employed by the
automotive industry. To this end, Ontario’s
Autonomous Vehicle Innovation Network (AVIN)
has published a 39-page report titled
Workforce Skills & Talent for the Future
Mobility Era, Realizing Needs and Filling Gaps
which addresses this important issue. A copy of
the report can be downloaded from AVIN’s web
site at
this link.
The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
(CBC) published an article on January 2, 2020
regarding the voracious appetite of the data
centre industry for electrical power and its
negative impacts on the environment. The
biggest culprits cited are streaming services
such as Netflix and Amazon Prime
according to this article. CAVs and 5G will be
contributing to this issue because they need a
steady stream of data which normally comes from
a Data Centre somewhere. The article can be
viewed at
this link.
Driving.ca
has a light-hearted article on distracted
pedestrians along with a serious suggestion for
using CAV technology to mitigate it.
Inattention by pedestrians wearing headphones
(music) or talking on mobile phones has resulted
in a nearly 30-year high in pedestrian
fatalities in the United States in 2018. The
article suggests utilizing infrastructure being
built for CAVs to alert distracted pedestrians
by communicating with their headphone or
smartphones using inter-vehicular communication
systems under development. The article can be
viewed at
this link.
International AV News
One major item in January was GM's launch
of the Cruise Origin. This is a new
vehicle designed to operate without a driver on
board. The all-electric shuttle is designed as a
shuttle for shared applications and does not
have manual controls such as pedals or a
steering wheel. There is no date for the
commercial launch of the Origin. More
information is at
this link.
Saudi Arabia
is the latest country to enter the AV ecosystem.
A joint project by King Abdullah University
of Science and Technology (KAUST),
EasyMile and Local Motors has
deployed a couple of electric self-driving
shuttles on the campus of KAUST since
mid-December 2019. Saudi Public Transport Co.
(SAPTCO) will manage and operate the autonomous
shuttles deployed on the KAUST campus. The
university hopes that the automated shuttles
will spark interest and research into this
nascent technology. More information is at
this link.
In line with other jurisdictions jumping into
CAV research and development, Scotland
sees great potential in CAVs for the future.
Scotland promotes its road network as a good
candidate for CAV pilot projects. To this end,
in December 2019, Transport Scotland
published a 56-page report titled CAV Roadmap
for Scotland. With partial funding of £4.5
million from the UK Government, Scotland
will be deploying a fleet of autonomous buses
running from Fife and Edinburgh, via the Forth
Road Bridge. More information is at
this link. A copy of the CAV Roadmap can be
downloaded from Transport Scotland’s website at
this link.
The proponents of AVs often paint a rosy picture
of what transportation will be like in the
future, eg. less congested roads, less
emissions, less fatalities and property damage,
etc. Not everyone agrees with these
predictions. In a January 5, 2020 article on
The Conversation website titled
Self-driving cars will not fix our
transportation woes, the author paints a
different less upbeat version for the future
based on a number of studies and modelling
efforts. For example, one study suggests carbon
emissions can increase by 200 percent (see
this link for the study report by the
National Renewable Energy Laboratory). The
author believes automated shuttles providing
first mile/last mile service to mass transit
hubs is the way to go. The article can be viewed
at
this link.
Following in Waymo’s footsteps, a startup
called AutoX has applied for a permit to
the State of California for testing
driverless cars (no human safety driver) on
California public roads. If granted, AutoX will
be only the second company granted such permit
in California. Similar to Waymo’s driverless
cars, there will be remote monitoring of the
driverless car by a team of human operators
located in a remote control centre. AutoX is
backed financially by the Chinese eCommerce
giant Alibaba. At present, about 60
companies have permits in California to test
their AVs on public roads with a safety driver
behind the wheel. More information is at
this link.
The U.S. Congress has been working on
passing legislation for AVs for several years.
So far, this has not happened. A couple of AV
bills introduced in the House of Representatives
failed to get approval in the Senate. On
December 3, 2019, a large group of advocates
(automakers, tech companies and other
stakeholders) were brought together in
Washington by the Coalition for Future
Mobility to lobby Congress to create federal
regulations to accelerate the pace of AV
development and commercial services. It appears
that bipartisan politics is interfering with
this task. This has forced some states to enact
their own regulations and is thus causing a
patchwork of regulations across the U.S. The key
Congressmen for AV legislation were unable to
give any kind of timeline for when the necessary
federal regulations might be created. Details
are at
this link.
In its first foray into Europe, Waymo
has acquired Oxford-based AI company Latent
Logic. This company is a spinoff of
Oxford University AI research with focus on
AVs. Latent Logic uses imitation learning
to teach AVs how to deal with complex behaviour
such as a car cutting off another at a
roundabout, a pedestrian emerging from a parked
car, or a cyclist skidding in rain. More
information is at
this link.
Telecom giant Huawei has the automotive
market in its sight. According to the
co-chairman of Huawei, Xu Zhijun, the car
is changing along with the needs of the users,
and driverless cars are the future. To be clear,
Huawei is not planning to get into auto
manufacturing itself. Its game plan is to use it
5G expertise and work with incumbent automakers
such as SAIC and China Mobile to
facilitate high speed low latency communication
for CAVs. More information is at
this link.
The Volkswagen Group of Germany
had set up Volkswagen Autonomy GmbH some
time ago to focus and advance its plans for
AVs. Volkswagen Autonomy has now created a
Silicon Valley subsidiary which is based at
VW’s Innovation and Engineering Center
California in Belmont. VW Autonomy
anticipates hiring 50 to 100 experts in systems
engineering and architecture this year. VW
expects the first use cases for autonomous
vehicles to be in the commercial sector such as
goods transportation or automated taxis. More
information is at
this link.
To ensure the safety of AI-driven systems such
as AVs or robotics, a whole raft of new
standards and guidelines is expected to emerge
in 2020. At present, standards/guidelines for
automated driving have been published by SAE,
IEEE, ISO, UL and other
organizations. To ensure these do not overlap or
leave gaps, IEEE will undertake a review of all
existing standards/guidelines including those of
its own from its various societies, e.g.
Vehicular Technology Society (VTS),
Computer Society (CS), Intelligent
Transportation Systems Society (ITSS) and
others. More information is at
this link.
And finally, some news on non-Canadian companies
in the CAV and related technologies space from
the 2020 Consumer Electronics Show (CES)
in Las Vegas:
Aptiv
gives a reporter rare access to its Las
Vegas Technical Centre (LVTC). Details
are
here.
Russian company Yandex demonstrated
its self-driving car at CES. Details
here.
Daimler Benz
CEO (Olla Källenius) gave a keynote
speech about a concept car inspired by one
of the most innovative entertainment brands,
envisioning a completely new form of
interaction between humans, technology and
nature. Details
here.
Reuters
has an interesting report on how automakers
are planning to copy the business model for
smartphones and connected TVs to
continuously generate revenue from the cars
they sell, e.g. offering streaming video,
vehicle performance upgrades, dashboard
commerce, etc. They have teamed up with
Microsoft, Blackberry and
Amazon Web Services and others to
achieve this. Details
here.
Here are a selection of other self-driving
car and vehicle technology topics at CES
2020. Details are
here and
here.
All exhibitors in the ‘Self-driving
Technology’ category at the CES 2020.
Details
here.
CAVCOE Speakers' Bureau
CAVCOE provides speakers for many different
types of events across Canada, the US and
overseas. This keeps us busy because everybody
understands that CAVs will have an impact on
almost everything. On the one hand, our
presentations have core messaging on the status
of CAVs, their deployment scenarios, and the
impact on business plans, government policy,
regulations and society as a whole. On the
other hand, each presentation is customized for
the audience and the time available. To enquire
about a speaker for your event, please write to
speakers@cavcoe.com
Upcoming AV-Related Events
Apr 1-2, 2020:
ADAS Sensors 2020, Detroit MI
Apr 2-7, 2020:
Transportation Association of Canada, Spring
Technical Meetings, Ottawa ON
April 21-22, 2020:
4th International VDI Autonomous Trucks Conference,
Munich, Germany
Jun 2-4, 2020:
2020 TU-Automotive Detroit, Novi MI
Jun
14-17, 2020:
ITS Canada 2020 Conference. Edmonton AB
Oct 4-8, 2020:
ITS World Congress, Los Angeles CA
Nov
3-5, 2020:
Unmanned Systems Canada's annual conference,
Calgary AB
TBA, 2020: CAV Canada 2020 conference, Ottawa ON
Jan 6-9, 2021 Consumer
Electronic Shows (CES), Las Vegas NV
TBA, 2021: Canadian
Automated Snow Plow Conference, Toronto ON
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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
the
private sector,
government and society.
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 2020
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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