Georgetown Edition | April 2024

Transportation

By the end of 2024, Texas drivers could look over to see a semitruck traveling down the highway with no one in the driver’s seat. Leading the charge in the Austin area is autonomous truck company Kodiak Robotics, which is already hauling IKEA furniture and Tyson Foods chicken daily on Texas roads. Currently, Kodiak trucks have a “safety driver” monitoring the truck as it carries freight for hundreds of miles. By the end of the year, Kodiak will send trucks out unmanned. Autonomous vehicles could adapt to be safer than a human driver, resolve supply chain issues and make life for truck drivers easier, Dan Go†, head of policy at Kodiak, said. Austin Curtis, CEO of San Marcos-based freight brokerage Guadalupe Logistics, said driverless semis could tackle routes that go into unsafe areas or are ‹nancially unviable. Driverless semis take on Texas

The breakdown

Goˆ said autonomous trucks diˆer from cars as they have more predictable driving patterns and fewer obstacles, such as pedestrians, cyclists and stop lights, compared to taxis. Cruise and Waymo also have larger Šeets than autonomous truck companies do. “The Kodiak system doesn’t get tired, it doesn’t get distracted, it doesn’t check its phone, it doesn’t have a bad day and take it out on the road,” he said.

Autonomous vehicle companies are required to self-report any crash incidents to the National Highway Trac Safety Administration. Waymo and Cruise take the lead in collisions among 39 companies with 240 and 151 crashes respectively, according to data collected from July 2021 to Feb. 15 by the NHTSA. Third in line is General Motors, which owns Cruise, with 144 crashes, according to the NHTSA.

Autonomous vehicle crashes

Waymo

240

Cruise

151

Car

Semitruck

General Motors

Data shows autonomous passenger vehicles have more crashes than autonomous trucks. However, passenger vehicles have larger testing eets and navigate more obstacles comparatively.

144

Kodiak 3 5 Aurora

0

50

100

150

200

250

NOTE: SELF REPORTED DATA WAS COLLECTED FROM JULY 2021ŽFEB. 15.

SOURCE: NATIONAL HIGHWAY TRAFFIC SAFETY ADMINISTRATIONˆCOMMUNITY IMPACT

Explained

Autonomous trucking companies such as Torc Robotics, Aurora and Gatik use sensors, cameras and mapping software as safety features, though each company has a diˆerent approach. Below are examples of how Kodiak addresses concerns: How do Kodiak trucks navigate obstacles? Unlike other self-driving vehicles that use heav- ily-detailed maps to navigate, Kodiak trucks use

a simpler map that can be updated regularly. The trucks also have 18 sensors that monitor all parts of the vehicle and its surroundings 10 times each sec- ond. This technology allows the semis to respond to changing road conditions, such as an accident. How do Kodiak trucks deal with adverse weather? The trucks routinely operate in inclement weather, as its sensors are able to see through rain

and fog better than the human eye can, according to the company. During a storm, the semis slow down to match the environment on the road and can pull over to wait it out. How do Kodiak trucks respond to tire blowouts? In the event of a tire blowout, Kodiak’s system triggers its "fallback plan" by turning on its hazards and pulling to a safe stop on the side of the road.

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