Published in Transportation

Ford scales back self-driving cars

by on12 April 2019


The first batch will have their limits

Ford CEO Jim Hackett scaled back hopes about the company's plans for self-driving cars.

He admitted that Ford had overestimated the arrival of autonomous vehicles. Hackett should know, he once headed Ford’s autonomous vehicle division. While Ford still plans on launching its self-driving car fleet in 2021, Hackett added that "its applications will be narrow, what we call geo-fenced, because the problem is still too complex".

This comes six months after Ford CEO of autonomous vehicles, Sherif Markaby, detailed plans for the company's self-driving car service in a Medium post.

The company has invested over $4 billion in the technology's development through 2023, including over $1 billion in Argo AI, an artificial intelligence company that is creating a virtual driver system. Ford is currently testing its self-driving vehicles in Miami, Washington, D.C. and Detroit.

It now seems that companies are admitting that expectations for self-driving cars were perhaps too high. Uber predicted earlier this week that its own fleet of autonomous cars would have a long wait until they finally hit the road. Waymo launched its self-driving taxi service late last year but hasn't opened it to the general public or expanded it beyond a few geo-fenced areas in Phoenix, Arizona.

Even though Hackett walked back immediate hopes for autonomous vehicles, he made it clear that he believed in the technology's potential. "When we bring this thing to market, it's going to be really powerful."

 

Last modified on 12 April 2019
Rate this item
(1 Vote)

Read more about: