The Isle of Man may hand over its roads to self-driving cars
A small, self-governing island may hand over its roads to
self-driving cars
By Matt McFarland February 2 at 10:21 AM
Phil Gawne, the transportation minister on the Isle of
Man, is working 16-hour days on two projects rooted in radically different
eras.
First, he’s trying to salvage the island’s horse-drawn
carriages that date to 1876. At the same time, Gawne is leading a project to
potentially lure companies that make fully self-driving cars, vehicles without
steering wheels or pedals.
Such is the life of a bureaucrat on one of the world’s
most unusual islands. The self-governing island — nestled between Ireland and
Britain — has a population close to 90,000 and a land mass about the size of
Chicago. It claims to have the oldest continuous parliament in the world,
dating back more than 1,000 years.
Its reliance on tourism dictates keeping the horse
carriage in business. Driverless cars probably would draw visitors, too, and
the government’s ability to move quickly given its small size could make it an
appealing destination for companies developing such vehicles.
“We like to be innovative on the island,” Gawne said. “We
like also to be independent. This helps both those areas in terms of our international
image and reputation.”
Gawne said the government has had discussions with
multiple companies interested in bringing driverless cars to the island. Any
needed adjustments to the island’s laws could be finished by early summer, a
speedy timeline compared to the pace of larger countries, which at times have
drawn criticism from the companies developing autonomous vehicles.
For some, a small island — far from the lumbering
bureaucracies and swarming cities of large nations — would be an obvious
launching point for the first large-scale public trials of fully autonomous
vehicles.
“Things can be tried on an island that may not be
practical in a city,” said David Alexander, an analyst at Navigant Research.
“On the mainland there will always be someone who wants to go beyond the range
of the trial and will then proclaim how useless autonomous cars are.”
He added that small island nations generally can’t afford
new transit systems on their own. A big company willing to invest in the local
infrastructure would probably find a willing government, Alexander said.
The Isle of Man’s government has set up a group to weigh
the merits of the technology and determine what laws need changed and what
incentives would attract companies, be it office space or warehouses. The
effort, which Gawne describes as “fairly urgent,” will be finalized within a
month. Gawne says any new regulations could then be pushed through in two or
three months. He anticipates broad support in the government.
“We’re very keen. We can see a lot of potential
advantages for the island,” he said. “It also helps in terms of the image of
Isle of Man.”
But others caution that launching self-driving cars on a
small island would not convince people around the world that the technology is
trustworthy. Thilo Koslowski, an autonomous-vehicle analyst at Gartner, expects
that once companies are ready to release fully self-driving cars — a step he
says isn’t imminent — they’ll want to unleash them first in a bustling mainland
city.
“That will be the proof in the pudding, to show these
technologies are reliable in a real-world environment where most people would
come to see those cars,” Koslowski said.
Bryant Walker Smith, a law professor at the University of
South Carolina, cautions that locations that want to court driverless cars
should move carefully.
“One of the public misconceptions about this field is
that a state that passed a law on autonomous driving must be ahead. It must be
signaling it’s friendly for this kind of development,” Smith said. “That has
not been the case.”
In 2015 Google expanded its tests of self-driving cars to
Austin, despite Texas not having passed legislation on autonomous cars.
Smith describes new state laws in the United States
dealing with autonomous cars as superficial because many of them don’t address
key issues. For example, can cars be built to flout laws like human drivers do,
such as speeding and crossing double yellow lines in some situations?
There’s also the lingering question of how to determine
an appropriate safety standard for driverless cars, Smith said.
So although the cars may eventually be an option for the
Isle of Man, it should probably make sure to keep that horse-drawn carriage
service running for now.
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