Obstacles such as tumbleweed stump self-driving cars

Vehicles continue to be baffled by mundane problems on route

Mayor of Los Angeles Eric Garcetti during the Connected Car Expo in Los Angeles. Photograph: Patrick T Fallon/Bloomberg
Mayor of Los Angeles Eric Garcetti during the Connected Car Expo in Los Angeles. Photograph: Patrick T Fallon/Bloomberg

Autonomous vehicles still struggle with mundane challenges such as tumbleweed, police officers giving traffic directions and wild animals, a Volkswagen executive has warned attendees at a conference session on the challenges facing the much-hyped technology.

Thomas Form, an electronics researcher for the car maker, was speaking on a conference panel at the Los Angeles Connected Car Expo alongside executives from Delphi and Continental, two of the industry's biggest suppliers.

The panel took place against the backdrop of bullish expectations about the potential for cars to take over responsibility for big swathes of driving from humans in as little as 10 years.

However, Form – who works for a department unconnected with VW’s current diesel emissions scandal – said that “unfortunately”, he had to outline what would be necessary before the technology was properly used on the roads.

READ MORE

“I think probably a lot of us have experience with having demonstrated automatic driving on highways,” Form said.

“In sunny weather, everything is fine. Do we have every time everywhere sunny weather?”

‘Difficult to handle’

Volkswagen last year drove a car autonomously on US roads from San Francisco to Las Vegas.

Some situations were “really difficult to handle”, Form added, pointing to the example of a police officer waving the vehicle through a red traffic light or an officer telling it to stop at a green light.

Vehicles also continued to be baffled by apparently mundane and unthreatening road obstacles such as tumbleweed and metallic food wrappings.

“Our car that drove from San Francisco to Las Vegas would have made a full emergency stop in front of tumbleweed,” Form said. He also highlighted the problem of “unco- operative traffic participants”, flashing up on the screen a picture of a wild boar.

“Nobody wants to stop for a rabbit, but for a hog, the situation is a little bit different,” he said. “There are a lot of problems to be resolved before we really could have automatic driving on the road.”

Form’s remarks were in line with the generally sceptical tone of the panel.

Road conditions

Brian Droessler, head of software and connected solutions for Continental, the German supplier to the car industry, highlighted the challenges of giving cars information about road conditions beyond the 300 metres currently typical.

He also discussed the problems of alerting drivers in good time when they need to take action over obstacles.

John Absmeier, an executive from the Silicon Valley operation of Delphi, the car component supplier, talked about the difficulties of developing sensors sensitive enough to develop an accurate picture of the road around a vehicle.

All three participants agreed that there were substantial problems with handing back control of vehicles to drivers in challenging situations – the approach that many current semi-autonomous trials, such as Daimler's self-driving trucks in Nevada – take.

Drivers would need to be alerted in good time and would still need to have the driving skills necessary to handle the toughest situations.

‘Foreseeable misuse’

Form said afterwards that such handovers could produce particular problems in the litigious US, where problems with handovers to drivers might be regarded as “foreseeable misuse” under US consumer protection laws.

A vehicle would have to be able to handle all road conditions without handing over to a driver.

“Either the car can drive automatically or not,” he said.

– Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2015