The ab1 bus service to Edinburgh seems much like any other. It leaves
Ferrytoll Park and Ride, on the north bank of the River Forth, and
crosses onto the m90 motorway, reaching a top speed of 50mph and
encountering a smattering of junctions, roundabouts and traffic lights
on its 25-minute journey into the city. None of this would be at all
remarkable—but for the fact that it does so without any input from a
human driver.
This is Britain’s first commercial self-driving bus and one of the
most advanced automated-vehicle (av) schemes in the world. The trial,
run by Stagecoach, a bus firm, began operating on May 15th and will
continue until at least 2025. Jim Hutchinson, the chief executive of
Fusion Processing, which designed the technology involved, hopes it
will become permanent.

Artificial intelligence (ai) is in the driver’s seat. Each of the five
buses on the route is controlled by computer processors, housed in a
black box roughly the size of a briefcase. They are programmed to
follow a set route. Some 18 sensors on the outside of the vehicle
provide a 360-degree view of its surroundings, and send data to the
computer many times a second. An ai model, trained on over 1m miles of
similar data, drives the bus. Current regulations mean that there must
be a human driver in the cab—but Mr Hutchinson hopes that the
government will allow the buses to be driven from a control room later
in the trial.
Self-driving technology is moving along. Britain’s Centre for
Connected and Autonomous Vehicles co-funds over 90 projects. Fusion
Processing is working with Asda, a supermarket, on a self-driving
lorry that it hopes to test on public roads next year. In April the
government approved software developed by Ford that allows hands-free
driving in passenger cars on motorways. Small, slow-moving autonomous
pods have been tried out on footpaths. Promoters say avs could make
transport cheaper, safer and greener. The government reckons the
market could be worth £42bn ($52.4bn) by 2035.

That vision is still a long way from being realised. Neil Greig of iam
RoadSmart, a safety charity, says optimism about the sector should be
tempered. “Computer programmers think they can cope with anything, but
there are always unexpected things on the road,” he warns. And if
driverless vehicles are to become widespread and useful, pockets of
experimentation will not be enough.

British transport law has not kept pace with the technology. America’s
federal government published its first legal framework for
self-driving vehicles in 2012; by mid-2022 40 states had passed laws
regulating avs. Gulf countries are increasingly nimble: the uae’s
licensing scheme for avs comes into force in July. Britain has
“transport laws from the 1800s that make reference to horses and
carts”, says Ben Gardner of Pinsent Masons, a law firm. “Some of these
countries only have three or four decades of legislation on the
books.”

The British government did pass a broad-brush law on avs in 2018: that
created a register for self-driving vehicles, which is currently
empty. But it did not set out in detail how avs should be defined,
approved, insured and operated; how driving tests might change; or how
to protect computers on wheels from being hacked.
Much of the groundwork for further legislation has been done. In
January 2022 the Law Commission issued recommendations on those
questions and a host of others, preparing the way for one of the most
comprehensive legal frameworks for avs in the world. The government
has said its transport bill will turn the proposals into law—but that
was delayed in October 2022 and there is no timetable for its
introduction. It has yet to be drafted.

av developers could take their products elsewhere, says Ashley Feldman
of techuk, an industry group. “There is a real risk…that if we do not
see legislation emerging, innovative companies investing here could
basically start to atrophy,” he told a parliamentary transport
committee in November. Buses, lorries and cars of the future may be
self-driving. But legislation still needs to be piloted by humans. ■
https://www.economist.com/britain/2023/05/18/aboard-britains-first-commercial-self-driving-bus

-- 
सादर/ Regards

अविनाश शाही/ Avinash Shahi
सहायक/ Assistant
मानव संसाधन प्रबंध विभाग/ Human Resource Management Department
भारतीय रिजर्व बैंक/ Reserve Bank of India
लखनऊ क्षेत्रीय कार्यालय/Lucknow RO
विस्तार/ Extension: 2232

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