Singapore has its first self-driving taxi

August 27, 2016 17:14

The first self-driving taxi company went into operation on Thursday (August 25) in Singapore under the name nuTonomy.

While major companies including Google and Volvo have been testing self-driving cars on public roads for years, nuTonomy says it is the first to publicly carry passengers, beating Uber, which is planning to launch a similar model in Pittsburgh in the coming weeks.

The company says a lot of people signed up for the trial, but only a few thousand people got to try it out in the first few months.

The Associated Press also said that "a few select citizens" will get free rides through smartphone registration, but they will need to receive a specific invitation.

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Currently, only about 6 self-driving taxis are in operation. Photo:Mashable.

Currently, only about six cars are in operation, and that number will double by the end of the year. The ultimate goal, nuTonomy announced, is to have autonomous taxis available nationwide by 2018, allowing them to reduce the number of cars on the roads in the country. After that, they will apply it worldwide.

The self-driving taxis are customized from Renault Zoe and Mitsubishi i-MiEV versions, still have a driver to respond to emergencies and a researcher sitting in the back to monitor the computer system.

Each car is equipped with 6 Lidar systems - a system that uses lasers to act as radar, along with 2 cameras on the dashboard to scan for obstacles and observe traffic lights.

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The system inside the self-driving taxi. Photo:Mashable.

Now that users can rent cars, nuTonomy says it wants to test a similar service in other cities in Asia, Europe and the US.

Autonomous taxis could reduce the number of cars on Singapore's roads from 900,000 to about 300,000, said Doug Parker, CEO of nuTonomy.

"When you reduce the number of large vehicles like that, a lot of opportunities open up. You can make the roads smaller, you can reduce the amount of parking spaces," Parker said. "I think it will change a lot for people in the city."

Singapore is seen as an ideal testing ground because of its climate, infrastructure and high level of road awareness among its citizens. As a closed island nation, Singapore is looking for unconventional ways to grow its economy, so it has supported autonomous vehicle research.

"We are facing a shortage of land and manpower. We want to leverage the power of technology to overcome that disadvantage, and introduce new concepts in the transport industry to improve Singapore's public transport," Mashable quoted Pang Kin Keong, Singapore's Deputy Minister of Transport and also Chairman of the Autonomous Vehicle Council.

According to Zing

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