According to Ford’s just announced plans, my 2022-2024 target for mass
deployment of self-driving vehicles in the US is right on target if not
overly pessimistic.
Please consider Ford Plans Mass-Market Self-Driving Car by 2021.
Ford says it will build a totally self-driving car by 2021 as it seeks to
take the lead in the global race to produce the world’s first high-volume
driverless vehicle.
The car, which will have no steering wheel or pedals, will be used in the
driverless taxi services that Ford said it expects to dominate the market in
the coming decade.
There’s a real business rationale for this,” said Ford chief executive
Mark Fields.
He said the cars will be “specifically designed for commercial” services
such as ride-booking or ride-sharing.
The move pits Ford directly against Google and Apple as well as rival car
manufacturers such as BMW, which has formed a joint partnership with Intel
and Mobileye to develop a fully driverless vehicle by 2021.
When it announced the deal last month, the German carmaker said it wanted
to become the “number one in autonomous driving”.
But Ford has announced a number of investments it hopes will give it the
edge over its rivals.
Michelle Krebs, a director at Auto Trader, said: “General Motors has been
grabbing all of the headlines of late, and Ford can’t be happy about that,
especially as some Wall Street analysts have wondered if Ford is falling
behind.”
Raj Nair, Ford’s chief technical officer, said driverless cars for
individual use would come later. “We don’t expect to see fully autonomous
vehicles for personal use for several years after they are first introduced”,
he told a press conference in Palo Alto on Tuesday.
The industry believes that driverless cars will result in far fewer road
deaths globally, as more than 90 per cent of accidents are a result of human
error.
2021 Book It!
2021 is now nearly a certainty. Why?
Competition demands it!
Trucks Headed for Scrap Heap
My claim was “millions of long-haul truck driving jobs would vanish” in
the 2022-2024 timeframe.
That time-line is looking a bit pessimistic. Why?
Because it’s a lot easier to navigate highways than city traffic. And
there is a bigger economic incentive.
I covered this yesterday in Lack of Shipping Demand Sends Big Ships to Scrap Heap
(Trucking Next!)
Key Ideas
- The daily [truck] driving limit is 11 hours maximum. The
average is likely less, lets call it 10.
- Autonomous trucks will not have any limit. With
driverless long-haul trucks, capacity will rise by at least 100% and
perhaps as much as 140%.
- A massive amount of trucking capacity is on the horizon.
- Truck ship rates will collapse.
- The independent truckers will go out of business, unable
to afford retrofit costs and unable to compete with the big trucking
companies if they don’t.
The Fed will get a big boost in productivity. Will the Fed like the
result?
Working Backwards
Google, Apple, Otto, Ford, GM, Tesla, Toyota, BMW, Audi, etc., are all in
direct competition and all have dates in the 2021 time-frame, if not sooner.
On May 17, I noted Ex-Google Engineers Launch “Otto”: Completely Driverless
Truck Testing Underway.
On August 6, I noted Singapore Unveils “Real” Self-Driving Taxis (No Steering
Wheel, No Pedal) Dateline 2019.
Add a year if you like. Does anyone think that will not happen?
If mass-production of autos “specifically designed for commercial” services
such as ride-booking or ride-sharing is in place by 2021 in the US, it’s
logical to assume conversion of trucks will already be largely in place on
the highways.
Interstate highways are much easier conceptually than cities. In terms of
a trucking time-line, 2022 looks more like a worst case scenario than some
super-optimistic projection.
Regulation has five years to catch up. It will. Competition between states
(and political contributions from the trucking and shipping industries) all
but ensures that outcome.
Nonetheless, I ask anyway …
"Millions of long-haul truck jobs will vanish in
2022-2024 timeframe" via self-driving says Mish. Realistic?
— Mike Shedlock (@MishGEA) August 16, 2016
Mike “Mish” Shedlock