The transportation secretary said slashing red tape would help the United States in the innovation race with China.
The Department of Transportation (DOT) said on Thursday that it would ease some safety regulations for the development of self-driving vehicles in a move to maintain U.S. global dominance in the industry.
The DOT stated that it would expand the Automated Vehicle Exemption Program (AVEP)âwhich currently applies only to imported AVsâto include domestically-produced automated vehicles (AVs).
Duffy stated that the move is part of the DOTâs innovation agenda to move the United States âcloser to a single national standardâ that promotes innovation by removing barriers while also maintaining safety.
To maintain safety, NHTSA said that it will continue requiring vehicles with certain advanced driver assistance and automated driving systems to report crash incidents, and streamline the reporting process to remove âunnecessary and duplicative requirements.â
NHTSAâs chief counsel, Peter Simshauser, said the move would allow AV manufacturers to âdevelop faster and spend less time on unnecessary process, while still advancing safety.â
âWe look forward to working with Secretary Duffy and his team to implement smart, forward-looking policies that will make our roads safer, expand mobility, strengthen supply chains, and drive American economic growth for generations to come,â AVIA CEO Jeff Farrah stated.
John Bozzella, president and CEO of Alliance for Automotive Innovation, said that the new framework would help ensure that the United States will not âcede AV leadership to China and other countries.â
Bozzella added that the new framework for self-driving cars is âoverdue.â He said that the AV industry has been âhamstrung by government inactionâ in the past years.
Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety voiced disappointment with the administrationâs move, emphasizing the need to enhance information on the safety of using self-driving cars on public roadways.
âHowever, troubling incidents have already occurred in the small number of cities in which they are currently deployed … Without safeguards, safety regulations, transparency and accountability, the success of AV deployment is imperiled at best and could result in deadly consequences at worst.â
The Epoch Times has reached out to the DOT for comment on the groupâs concerns but did not receive a response by publication time.
In 2022, General Motors (GM) filed a petition with NHTSA seeking permission to deploy up to 2,500 self-driving vehicles annually without human controls such as brake pedals or mirrors. The automaker subsequently withdrew the petition last year after a lengthy government review had not been completed.
Reuters contributed to this report.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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