Europe
Will Require New Vehicles to Include Autonomous Self-Braking System

Autonomous Emergency
Braking
Cars in Europe may soon
become very much more robotic whether drivers want them to or not. New rules
coming down from the European Commission will require all commercial vehicles to be fitted with
autonomous emergency braking (AEB) technology by November 2013, and passenger
vehicles could soon follow suit. These cars will go beyond simply sending a
signal to the driver when they detect an impending collision via radar, lidar
(that's like radar but with light), or video sensors and apply the brakes
themselves.
Some drivers will
doubtless mistrust an automated system that can interfere with the controls
without prompting from the driver's seat, but proponents of the system think it
could drastically curtail traffic accidents (particularly fender benders at low
speeds) and save billions of euros annually across Europe by reducing the
economic productivity lost to accident-related congestion. One study
commissioned by the EC showed traffic accidents could be cut by more than a
quarter.
Some 80 percent of the
cars on sale in Europe at this moment do not possess AEB technology, and the EC
doesn't wish to force it on manufacturers and citizens all at once, an official
said. So instead, the European New Car Assessment Program--a seven-nation
consortium that does crash-test rating for European autos--is simply gong to
make it more or less impossible for a car to receive a five-star safety rating
without AEB technology on board. That's called forcing without appearing to
force, but hey--if the technology really can reduce accidents and improve road
safety, maybe a strong nudge toward universal adoption isn't such a bad thing.
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