Driverless Taxi Experiment to Start in Japan
5:40 pm JST Oct 1, 2015 AUTOMOBILE
RoboCab: Driverless Taxi Experiment to Start in Japan
By JUN HONGO
From the country
where hotels are operated by robots and androids serve as clerks at department
stores comes the latest unmanned project: the robot cab.
Japan’s cabinet office, Kanagawa prefecture and Robot
Taxi Inc. on Thursday said they will start experimenting with unmanned taxi
service beginning in 2016. The service will be offered for approximately 50
people in Kanagawa prefecture, just south of Tokyo, with the auto-driving car
carrying them from their homes to local grocery stores.
According to the project organizers, the cabs will drive
a distance of about three kilometers (two miles), and part of the course will
be on major avenues in the city. Crew members will be aboard the car during the
experiment in case there is a need to avoid accidents.
Robot Taxi Inc., a joint venture between mobile Internet
company DeNA Co. and vehicle technology developer ZMP Inc., is aiming to
commercialize its driverless transportation service by 2020. The company says
it will seek to offer unmanned cabs to users including travelers from overseas
and locals in areas where buses and trains are not available.
Shinjiro Koizumi, son of former Prime Minister Junichiro
Koizumi and a vice minister in the current government of Prime Minister Shinzo
Abe, appeared at an event Thursday afternoon to promote the driverless-taxi
effort. “There are a lot of people who say it’s impossible, but I think this
will happen faster than people expect,” he said.
The project is a part of the government’s effort to
promote innovation and startup businesses.
Among companies trying to turn driverless cars into
business is Google Inc., which started testing its system in Texas in July.
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