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News Roundup: India Says ‘No’ to Self-Driving Cars, Two Companies Plan Cross-Border Road Test for Driverless Cars, and More

Jennifer van der Kleut

A roundup of recent headlines to come out of the driverless and connected-car industries this past week:

India says No to driverless cars over fear of job losses

India’s transport minister, Nitin Gadkari, told news outlets this past week that driverless cars will not be allowed in India anytime soon, due to the number of job losses it could lead to. Gadkari said India’s unemployment rate is still too high to risk losing jobs to automated vehicles. As it is currently, he said the country is in need of at least 100,000 more commercial drivers and he looks forward to being able to provide the Indian people with so many available jobs. In addition, India officials estimate that the amount of infrastructure changes that would be needed to prepare India for self-driving cars would be far too expensive given the nation’s current economy. Gadkari did say he would not rule out the technology altogether in the future if India’s situation improves. Read more from BBC News.

 

Manhattan proposal wants to transform cross-island highways into roads exclusively for driverless vehicles

Manhattan-based architecture firm Edg has proposed a bold project that they say would reduce urban pollution and congestion in Manhattan and make some major roadways on the island exclusive to driverless cars. The proposal, called “Loop NYC,” wants to take major roadways that cut across the island-namely, 14th, 23rd, 34th, 42nd, 57th, 86th and 110th streets-and turn them into roads that are exclusive to driverless cars. Edg says this could cut down traffic time from the current 40 minutes it takes to drive a loop from Grand Central Station to Lower Manhattan and back down to just 11 minutes, with traffic flowing more smoothly thanks to self-driving vehicles. In addition, Loop NYC wants to create enormous green spaces and pedestrian bridges that would cross over the driverless roadways and would be exclusive to pedestrians and bicyclists, improving beauty while reducing pollution, as well as increasing the city’s walkability. As expected, the proposal is still “largely speculative” in nature, particularly given the fact that the federal government still has not approved a nationwide set of laws and regulations for driverless cars. Read more about Loop NYC on ArchDaily.

 

Two companies plan road test for driverless cars across the border from the U.S. into Canada

Two major companies working on driverless vehicle technology, Continental and Magna, are teaming up for a whopper of a road test. The two companies plan to send self-driving cars across the border from Michigan into Sarnia, in Toronto, Canada. The cars will reportedly cross the border at two locations-through the tunnel from Detroit into Windsor, and crossing the Blue Water Bridge into Sarnia. Reps say the cars’ “driverless mode” will be enabled whenever possible but will likely include a few instances when the driver will take over control. They add, crossing an international border makes for incredibly unique driving conditions, which will allow Continental and Magna to collect a lot of valuable data from the cars’ cameras, LiDAR and radar. In addition, the test will reveal future hurdles when it comes to crossing the borders of two different countries with two different sets of laws and regulations. Read more from TechCrunch.

Image: Loop NYC rendering by Edg

Michigan Looking for Transportation Workers

Burney Simpson

Transportation safety-related jobs in Michigan have bounced back since the Great Recession and now make up nearly 13 percent of the state’s workforce, according to a recently released study.

There were 564,477 transportation-safety jobs in Michigan in 2014, a 13 percent increase since 2009 when they bottomed out at 498,274.

Despite the rise, Michigan still isn’t back to its pre-recession level of 597,032 jobs in the category, according to the Transportation Safety Workforce Report 2015 by the ATLAS Center at the University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute, the Workforce Intelligence Network, and the Michigan Academy for Green Mobility Alliance (MAGMA).

The authors grouped these jobs into three large clusters – engineering & design; operations; and planning.

The engineering cluster covers safety engineering in manufacturing vehicles and their components. Operations covers occupation that ensure the transportation system operates safely. And planning refers to the planning and building of the systems.

Michigan needs young people to enter the field. About 112,000, or 20 percent, of the workers in transportation safety in Michigan are 55 or older, and will need to be replaced as they retire in the next 10 years.

And there’s a growing need for people trained to work in areas related to connected, autonomous and automated technology, according to MAGMA, which seeks to advance new technology in mobility and automobile manufacturing.

To find the most in-demand jobs, the study tracked the top five transportation-safety related job postings in 2014 by Michigan employers.

Coming in neck and neck for the most sought after employee were heavy- and tractor-trailer truck drivers, with 17,000 ads, beating out software developers, with 16,600 ads.

There was also a demand for mechanical engineers who could contribute to the design of safe automobiles and their accessories, with about 7,000 ad postings.