The future of the car-Clean, safe and it drives itself
Cars have
already changed the way we live. They are likely to do so again
Apr 20th 2013
|From the print edition
SOME
inventions, like some species, seem to make periodic leaps in progress. The car
is one of them. Twenty-five years elapsed between Karl Benz beginning
small-scale production of his original Motorwagen and the breakthrough, by
Henry Ford and his engineers in 1913, that turned the car into the ubiquitous,
mass-market item that has defined the modern urban landscape. By putting
production of the Model T on moving assembly lines set into the floor of his
factory in Detroit, Ford drastically cut the time needed to build it, and hence
its cost. Thus began a revolution in personal mobility. Almost a billion
cars now roll along the world’s highways.
Today the car
seems poised for another burst of evolution. One way in which it is changing
relates to its emissions. As emerging markets grow richer, legions of new
consumers are clamouring for their first set of wheels. For the whole world to catch up with American levels of car ownership, the
global fleet would have to quadruple.
Even a fraction of that growth would present fearsome challenges, from
congestion and the price of fuel to pollution and global warming.
Yet, as our
special report this week argues, stricter regulations and smarter technology
are making cars cleaner, more fuel-efficient and safer than ever before. China,
its cities choked in smog, is following Europe in imposing curbs on emissions
of noxious nitrogen oxides and fine soot particles. Regulators in most big car
markets are demanding deep cuts in the carbon dioxide emitted from car
exhausts. And carmakers are being remarkably inventive in finding ways to
comply.
Granted,
battery-powered cars have disappointed. They remain expensive, lack range and
are sometimes dirtier than they look—for example, if they run on electricity
from coal-fired power stations. But car companies are investing heavily in
other clean technologies. Future motorists will have a widening choice of
super-efficient petrol and diesel cars, hybrids (which switch between batteries
and an internal-combustion engine) and models that run on natural gas or
hydrogen. As for the purely electric car, its time will doubtless come.
Towards the
driverless, near-crashless car
Meanwhile, a
variety of “driver assistance” technologies are appearing on new cars, which
will not only take a lot of the stress out of driving in traffic but also
prevent many accidents. More and more new cars can reverse-park, read traffic
signs, maintain a safe distance in steady traffic and brake automatically to
avoid crashes. Some carmakers are promising technology that detects pedestrians
and cyclists, again overruling the driver and stopping the vehicle before it
hits them. A number of firms, including Google, are
busy trying to take driver assistance to its logical conclusion by creating
cars that drive themselves to a chosen destination without a human at the
controls. This is where it gets exciting.
Sergey Brin, a
co-founder of Google, predicts that driverless cars will be ready for sale to
customers within five years. That may be optimistic, but the prototypes that
Google already uses to ferry its staff (and a recent visitor from The
Economist) along Californian freeways are impressive. Google
is seeking to offer the world a driverless car built from scratch, but it is
more likely to evolve, and be accepted by drivers, in stages.
As sensors and
assisted-driving software demonstrate their ability to cut accidents,
regulators will move to make them compulsory for all new cars. Insurers are
already pressing motorists to accept black boxes that measure how carefully
they drive: these will provide a mass of data which is likely to show that
putting the car on autopilot is often safer than driving it. Computers never
drive drunk or while texting.
If and when
cars go completely driverless—for those who want this—the benefits will be
enormous. Google gave a taste by putting a blind man in a prototype and filming
him being driven off to buy takeaway tacos. Huge numbers of elderly and
disabled people could regain their personal mobility. The young will not have
to pay crippling motor insurance, because their reckless hands and feet will no
longer touch the wheel or the accelerator. The colossal toll of deaths and
injuries from road accidents—1.2m killed a year worldwide, and 2m hospital
visits a year in America alone—should tumble down, along with the costs to
health systems and insurers.
Driverless cars
should also ease congestion and save fuel. Computers brake faster than humans. And they can sense
when cars ahead of them are braking. So driverless cars will be able to drive
much closer to each other than humans safely can. On motorways they could form
fuel-efficient “road trains”, gliding along in the slipstream of the vehicle in
front. People who commute by car will gain hours each day to work, rest or read
a newspaper.
Roadblocks
ahead
Some carmakers
think this vision of the future is (as Henry Ford once said of history) bunk.
People will be too terrified to hurtle down the motorway in a vehicle they do
not control: computers crash, don’t they? Carmakers whose self-driving
technology is implicated in accidents might face ruinously expensive lawsuits,
and be put off continuing to develop it.
Yet many people
already travel, unwittingly, on planes and trains that no longer need human
drivers. As with those technologies, the shift towards driverless cars is
taking place gradually. The cars’ software will learn the tricks that humans
use to avoid hazards: for example, braking when a ball bounces into the road,
because a child may be chasing it. Google’s self-driving
cars have already clocked up over 700,000km, more than many humans ever drive;
and everything they learn will become available to every other car using the
software. As for the liability issue, the law should be changed to make
sure that when cases arise, the courts take into account the overall safety
benefits of self-driving technology.
If
the notion that the driverless car is round the corner sounds far-fetched,
remember that TV and heavier-than-air flying machines once did, too. One day people
may wonder why earlier generations ever entrusted machines as dangerous as cars
to operators as fallible as humans.
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