Nissan’s thumbs up for new autonomous driving legislation in the UK
Proposed new legislation for the insuring of self-driving cars will have a significant role in the adoption and integration of breakthrough technology that can help reduce traffic congestion and vehicle incidents on UK roads.
Nissan says the proposed new legislation for the insuring of self-driving cars will have a significant role in the adoption and integration of the breakthrough technology that can help reduce traffic congestion and vehicle incidents on UK roads, as well as creating new jobs in the UK's high-tech economy.
The Japanese carmaker has already confirmed that its refreshed Qashqai will be the first Nissan car in Europe – and the first UK-manufactured car – equipped with autonomous technology in 2017 with ProPilot. The introduction marks an important step in the brand's commitment to make autonomous drive technologies available to the mass market.
It will be produced at the company's flagship manufacturing plant in Sunderland and sold in the UK as well as markets across Europe. The multi-award winning Qashqai is the UK's fifth-highest selling car.
ProPilot, Nissan's stage one autonomous drive technology, enables the car to drive autonomously and safely in a single lane in heavy traffic conditions on highways.
The introduction of ProPilot in Europe next year is the first step in the carmaker's longer-term commitment to launch a range of vehicles with autonomous drive capabilities by 2020.
In 2018 ‘multiple-lane control’ in Nissan cars will allow them to autonomously negotiate hazards and change lanes while driving. 2020 will see the launch of "intersection autonomy," which will allow cars to navigate busy city junctions and heavy urban traffic without driver intervention.
The Renault-Nissan Alliance has already announced it will launch more than 10 vehicles with autonomous drive technology by 2020 in the United States, Europe, Japan and China. The technology will be installed on mainstream, mass-market cars at affordable prices, with a focus on accessibility to all customers.
This week Nissan also marked the opening of a Joint Research Centre for Intelligent Mobility at Tsinghua University (Department of Automotive Engineering) in Beijing, China. The collaboration will work on the research and development of electric vehicle and autonomous drive technologies for the Chinese market.
"Any new legislation, such as we've seen announced, that supports the adoption and integration of autonomous vehicle technologies, is a positive for the UK," said Paul Willcox, chairman of Nissan Europe. "Autonomously-equipped vehicles will improve the safety and well-being of drivers, with fewer collisions and reduced traffic congestion. The UK economy can also benefit, by playing a pivotal role in a global industry estimated to be worth £900 billion (Rs 8,858,700 crore) by 2025. Nissan is about taking innovative, premium technologies and making them accessible and affordable to the general public. We're excited to be debuting the first phase of our autonomous driving technology, ProPilot, on the Nissan Qashqai in 2017 – one of the UK's best-selling cars and a model produced right here at our Sunderland plant."
Willcox added: "The introduction of ProPilot technology will be an evolution not a revolution as the building blocks for this are already in place in many of our cars today through our Safety Shield Technology."
RELATED ARTICLES
Sept 2024 From R&D incentives to EV infrastructure: What auto components industry expects from Budget 2024
Sept 2024 From R&D incentives to EV infrastructure: What auto components industry expects from Budget 2024
US car majors hit the brakes on driverless cars
Ford Motor and Volkswagen to close self-driving startup Argo AI, due to lack of technology and clear regulations.
Autoliv and Geely to develop advanced safety tech for future vehicles
Scope of cooperation includes safety for high-level autonomous driving, intelligent steering wheel technology, a 360deg ...