Internet search company Google Inc has begun discussions with most of the world's top automakers and has assembled a team of traditional and nontraditional suppliers to speed efforts to bring self-driving cars to market by 2020, a Google executive said on Wednesday.
"We'd be remiss not to
talk to ... the biggest auto manufacturers. They've got a lot to offer,"
Chris Urmson, director of Google's self-driving car project, said in an
interview.
Those manufacturers, he said,
include General Motors Co, Ford Motor Co, Toyota Motor Corp, Daimler AG and
Volkswagen AG.
"For us to jump in and
say that we can do this better, that's arrogant," Urmson said. Google has
not determined whether it will build its own self-driving vehicles or function
more as a provider of systems and software to established vehicle
manufacturers.
Google's self-driving
prototype cars, he said, were built in Detroit by engineering and specialty
manufacturing company Roush.
GM is open to working with
Google on self-driving cars, Jon Lauckner, GM's chief technology officer, said
on Monday.
Urmson's expectation that the
first fully autonomous vehicles will be production-ready within five years
mirrors the view expressed a day earlier by another Silicon Valley
entrepreneur, Elon Musk, chief executive of Tesla Motors Inc.
Musk, who spoke Tuesday at
the Automotive News World Congress conference, said he expects the lack of
clear federal regulations covering self-driving cars could delay their
introduction until 2022 or 2023.
Urmson, however, said his
Google colleagues "don't see any particular regulatory hurdles."
Google has been briefing the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the chief U.S. auto regulator,
"from early on in our program," Urmson said. "The worst thing we
could do is surprise them."
Urmson said Google is
developing and refining self-driving systems and components with such auto
parts suppliers as Continental AG, Robert Bosch, ZF and LG Electronics.
Google's prototype cars use microprocessors made by Nvidia Corp , a Silicon
Valley chipmaker that also supplies Mercedes-Benz and other automakers.
Continental said it began
discussions in 2012 about supplying parts for Google's self-driving car. Google
asked the German supplier to provide tires, some electronics and other
components, according to Samir Salman, chief executive of Continental's NAFTA
region.
Google shortly will begin
deploying a test fleet of fully functioning prototypes of its pod-like
self-driving car, which dispenses with such familiar automotive parts as
steering wheel, brakes and accelerator pedal. While each of the Google prototypes
will have a "test driver" on board, the cars have no provision for
human intervention in steering or braking.
Urmson suggested the
no-frills look of the Google prototypes, a far cry from the opulent appearance
of the self-driving F015 concept vehicle unveiled last week by Mercedes, does
not necessarily reflect the final design for production.
He described the Google
prototype as "a practical, near-term testing platform" that will
evolve over time.
"Airliners today don't
look like the Wright brothers' flyer" of 100 years ago, he said.
Urmson said self-driving cars
represent a "transformative" moment in the evolution of
transportation, an opportunity to extend motoring to blind, elderly and
disabled persons who otherwise could not drive.
"You're really changing
the relationship you have with transportation. You're changing what it means to
get around."
Regarding Google's desire to
partner with traditional automakers and suppliers, Urmson said Detroit is more
innovative than is sometimes acknowledged. Automakers are "doing something
incredibly complicated."
"You look at a car ...
and people forget just how much magic there is in that thing."
No comments:
Post a Comment