https://aboutmanchester.co.uk/a-top-secret-electric-vehicle-has-completed-the-uks-longest-and-most-complex-autonomous-car-journey/
A top-secret electric vehicle has completed the UK’s longest and most
complex autonomous car journey
February 5, 2020  Nigel Barlow

[image  
https://www.aboutmanchester.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/AD-operation-viewer_4-1024x683.jpg
]

A top-secret electric vehicle has completed the UK’s longest and most
complex autonomous car journey – self-navigating itself 230 miles on British
roads.

The modified 2017 electric Nissan LEAF travelled from Nissan Technical
Centre Europe (NTCE) in Cranfield, Beds., to the brand’s manufacturing plant
in Sunderland [map
https://goo.gl/maps/8n7FCGmRGEhff84J7
].

Over the course of the 230 mile journey, the autonomous car tackled country
lanes with no or minimal road markings, junctions, roundabouts and
motorways.

The autonomous technology activated along the route to change lanes, merge
and stop and start when necessary.

The only moment the passenger took control of the LEAF was to drive into
motorway services – in order to charge it.

The achievement, which took place on public roads with surrounding motorists
none the wiser, is the result of 30 months of work by a consortium of
industry leaders, backed by the UK government, in what has been known as the
HumanDrive project [
https://humandrive.co.uk/
].

George Freeman, Future of Transport Minister, said: “The UK is fast becoming
a leader in intelligent and automated vehicle and traffic management
technology, a huge global sector set to create thousands of jobs.

“Our Future of Mobility: Urban Strategy is supporting transport innovation
for cleaner, greener and smarter transport, and Nissan’s successful
HumanDrive project is an exciting example of how the next phase of the UK’s
transport revolution could look.”

Nissan worked with Hitachi, Highways England and a number of other partners
to produce one of the most technologically advanced autonomous vehicles ever
seen.

Business Minister Nadhim Zahawi added: “Safely completing the longest
autonomous drive in Britain is an incredible achievement for Nissan and the
HumanDrive consortium, and a huge step towards the rollout of driverless
cars on UK streets.

“This project is a shining example of how the automotive industry, working
with government, can drive forward technology to benefit people’s mobility –
while helping to slash carbon emissions.”

The LEAF is capable of handling narrow winding roads, carriageways with no
lane division markings and poorly-marked roundabouts – all on its own.

By building a dataset of previously encountered traffic scenarios and
solutions, it can use this ‘learned experience’ to handle similar scenarios
in future and plot a safe route around an obstacle.

This technology is designed to create a more familiar and comfortable
experience for passengers in the car, essentially by making the way the car
acts more human like.

The HumanDrive project demonstrates how car firms like Nissan, along with
other industry leaders and the UK government are committed to making
autonomous vehicles a reality on European roads.

HumanDrive is jointly funded by the UK government through the Centre for
Connected and Autonomous Vehicles (CCAV) [
https://twitter.com/ccavgovuk?lang=en
], Innovate UK, and nine other consortium partners. The joint funding
package for the project totalled £13.5m.

The landmark Grand Drive achievement is the latest to show how Britain is at
the forefront of high-level automotive technology and a top location for
investment.

Last year UK tech companies secured a third of the £30.4 billion raised in
Europe, with the UK (10.1bn) raising more venture capital investment than
Germany (£5.4bn) and France (£3.4bn) combined.

Bob Bateman, project manager at Nissan Technical Centre Europe, said: “The
HumanDrive project allowed us to develop an autonomous vehicle that can
tackle challenges encountered on UK roads that are unique to this part of
the world, such as complex roundabouts and high-speed country lanes with no
road markings, white lines or kerbs.”

David Moss, senior vice president for Research & Development in Europe,
Nissan Europe, added: “Nissan’s Intelligent Mobility vision is to develop
autonomous drive technologies for use in all of our cars in any area of the
world.

“The door is now open to build on this successful UK research project, as we
move towards a future which is more autonomous, more electric, and more
connected.”
[© aboutmanchester.co.uk]


https://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/cars/article-7968813/Self-driving-Nissan-Leaf-electric-car-navigated-230-miles-UK-roads.html
The car that drove itself from Bedfordshire to Sunderland: Self-driving
Nissan Leaf electric car navigates 230 MILES on the longest autonomous
journey ever on UK roads
5 February 2020 ... Self-driving Nissan Leaf electric car navigates 230
MILES on the longest autonomous journey ever ...
https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2020/02/05/09/24335966-7968813-image-a-118_1580894319533.jpg


+  (v)
https://cleantechnica.com/2020/02/03/level-6-autonomous-driving-smart-traffic-lights/
Level 6 Autonomous Driving Concept, & An Appeal To Elon Musk To Make Smart
Traffic Lights
February 3rd, 2020  Self-driving Nissan Leaf electric car navigated itself
230 miles on UK roads
https://cleantechnica.com/files/2020/01/Model-3-two-screens-1536x959.jpg




For EVLN EV-newswire posts use:
 http://www.evdl.org/archive/


{brucedp.neocities.org}

--
Sent from: http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
ARCHIVE: http://www.evdl.org/archive/index.html
INFO: http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
Please discuss EV drag racing at NEDRA (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to