Ford Plans Fully Driverless Car

Ford chief Mark Fields plans a fully autonomous vehicle to be used by 
ride-hailing or ride-sharing services by 2021.


By Christina Rogers  
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/technology/ford-to-have-fully-autonomous-car-by-2021/news-story/677b1c7679192678f7518311187f1c00



Ford intends to have a fully driverless vehicle — no steering wheel, no pedals 
— on the road within five years.

The car will initially be used for commercial ride-hailing or ride-sharing 
services, with sales to consumers coming later.

“This is a transformational moment in our industry .. and it is a 
transformational moment for our company,” said chief executive Mark Fields, as 
he announced the plan at Ford’s Silicon Valley campus in California.

Ford’s approach to the autonomous car breaks from many other companies, like 
Mercedes-Benz and Tesla Motors, which plan to gradually add self-driving 
capability to traditional cars.

Just last month, BMW AG, Intel and the automotive camera maker Mobileye 
announced a plan to put an autonomous vehicle with a steering wheel on the road 
by 2021.

Instead, Ford is taking the same approach as Alphabets Google, which supports 
moving directly to self-driving cars once the technology is perfected.

“We abandoned the stepping stone approach of driver-assist technologies and 
decided we were going to take the full leap,” said Raj Nair, Ford’s chief 
technical officer.

Nair says Ford will continue developing systems that assist the driver, like 
automatic emergency braking or lane departure warning.

But he said semi-autonomous systems that can operate the car but then cede 
control back to the driver when an obstacle is encountered are actually 
dangerous in Ford’s view.

Engineers couldn’t figure out how to make sure drivers stay engaged and ready 
to take over.

So, Ford decided to remove the driver altogether. “We learned that to achieve 
full autonomy, we have to take a completely different path,” Nair said.

Jeremy Carlson, a senior analyst with IHS Automotive, says he doesn’t know of 
another automaker that is taking Ford’s approach. But there are challenges 
either way, he said.

Riders may have a hard time trusting fully autonomous cars, for example, but 
semi-autonomous cars can be dangerous because drivers may not understand what 
the vehicles can and cannot do.

“I don’t think there’s going to be any one right answer,” he said.

But Dillon Blake, senior director of business development for Runzheimer, a 
transportation consulting firm, says Ford’s approach could go wrong very 
quickly.

“When you do it in steps, you get to make tweaks along the way. When you go all 
or bust, it’s like going ‘all in’ in Vegas,” Blake said.

Ford’s vehicle will be specifically designed for commercial mobility services, 
like taxi companies, and will be available in high volumes. Ford says personal 
ownership of self-driving cars will come later.

Ford didn’t say whether it would work with a ride-sharing partner or try to 
establish services on its own.

Rival General Motors has a partnership with the ride-hailing company Lyft and 
has also bought a self-driving software company called Cruise Automation.

Dearborn, Michigan-based Ford also said it plans to double the staff at its 
Palo Alto research centre by the end of next year to nearly 300 people.

It will buy two more buildings next to its current building in order to expand 
its campus, Fields said. Ford will also make several investments and 
partnerships to speed its development of autonomous vehicles.

Ford and Chinese search engine company Baidu will each invest $US75 million in 
Velodyne, a company that makes laser sensors that help guide self-driving cars.

Velodyne, based in Morgan Hill, California, says it will use the $US150 million 
investment to expand design and production and reduce the cost of its sensors. 
Laser sensors — dubbed Lidar, which stands for light, detection and ranging — 
can also be used in conventional vehicles as part of driver assist systems.

Ford said it has acquired Israel-based computer vision and machine learning 
company SAIPS for its expertise in artificial intelligence and computer vision. 
It also invested in Berkeley, California-based Civil Maps for its 
three-dimensional mapping capabilities.

Ford has also formed a partnership with New York-based Nirenberg Neuroscience 
LLC, a machine vision company that has developed devices for restoring sight to 
patients with degenerative eye diseases.

Ford shares fell 9 cents to $US12.34 on Tuesday.



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