Stuart Young
Partner
Chair of Automotive Group
Article
The government recently responded to a consultation on driverless cars. Stuart Young, partner at Gowling WLG, explains the scope of the consultation and considers the government response.
Driverless cars can significantly reduce delays, DfT reports, LNB News 06/01/2017 65
A new study has shown that driverless cars could significantly reduce delays in the future, the Department for Transport (DfT)
DfT has reported. DfT found that delays and traffic flow improved as the proportion of automated vehicles (AVs) increased above specific levels. Alongside this study, the government has also published its response to a consultation on insurance for driverless cars.
The Department for Transport (DfT) and the Centre for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles (CCAV) carried out a consultation on proposals for advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) and automated vehicle technologies (AVT) from 11 July 2016 to 9 September 2016. There were 428 responses from individuals and organisations. Among the organisational responses were different entities including insurance bodies, law firms, road safety groups, manufacturers and automotive representative groups.
The government proposals covered three related but distinct areas:
On 6 January 2017, the DfT issued the government response, covered in more detail below.
The response largely restated the government's initial proposals which received broad support. The government did make a change to its view on the compulsory motor insurance framework in the light of feedback from the automotive and insurance industries and law firms.
Looking at each consultation area in turn:
While the government is taking a cautious approach, we at Gowling WLG share concerns within the industry that the focus on near-to-market technology might inhibit the development of future technologies and the adoption of highly and fully automated AVs. In particular, we believe that the DfT ought to set out now the regulatory structure that will apply to the software (algorithms) that will, in effect, control AVs. Our white paper on this topic makes specific recommendations including the creation of a regulatory body to clarify rules and responsibilities now to ensure innovators in the industry can properly plan vehicles and systems for the years to come.
In relation to the insurance proposals, the government's proposals for reform will be reflected in the Modern Transport Bill.
The Modern Transport Bill was mentioned in the Queen's Speech in May 2016 and there have been a number of consultations since then, including this one related to ADAS and AVs. The Bill is not yet before Parliament but is generally expected to be published in early 2017.
In relation to the changes not requiring primary legislation (Highway Code and the Road Vehicles (Construction and Use)
Regulations 1986) the DfT is proposing to consult on the specific amendment proposals although no timetable is yet set.
In some countries the motor insurance model is to attach insurance to the vehicle itself but in the UK the motor insurance model is based on insuring the driver of the vehicle. So, what happens when the vehicle is capable of driving itself and has an accident during automated mode? Although a manufacturer of the AV might be liable to compensate an innocent victim in such a case, there is a worry that compensation would not be quick because:
The DfT proposal is to supplement the compulsory motor insurance (RTA 1988, Pt VI) to include the use of AVs, and establish a single insurer model, where an insurer covers both the driver's use of the vehicle and the AVT. That way the driver is covered both when they are driving and when they have activated the autonomous features.
In this model the insurer is, in effect, taking on the liability which would have been the responsibility of the manufacturer.
Consequently the insurer will have a right of recovery against the manufacturer. The DfT hopes that the relationship between the insurance and the manufacturer communities will rapidly mature and that, with multiple incidents and enhanced data capture in accidents, the attribution of liability will be quickly resolved between insurer and manufacturer.
There was, however, some resistance on the part of manufacturers to this single insurance model and a view that existing product liability law is sufficient.
There is a genuine belief that AVs will deliver safety benefits but those benefits will not be gained if there is low take-up of AVT. It is important to clarify the liability regime in order to bolster public confidence in AVs and specifically in ensuring that members of the public do not feel that the introduction of AVs will put them in greater danger or cut off legitimate routes to compensation. In the UK in 2015, human error was involved in 85.7% of all reported road incidents-the safety dividend in removing human error from such incidents would be enormous and the DfT is fulfilling its function in ensuring that the legal infrastructure supports a move towards AVs and a safer environment.
In this area the proposals are much more specific.
Highway Code:
This will require updating to allow for platooning technology in which the gaps between vehicles are likely to be much less than two seconds. A majority of respondents to the consultation were against immediate amendment and the DfT has now proposed a series of controlled platooning trials in the near future to inform its thinking in this area
Road Vehicles (Construction and Use) Regulations 1986:
It is clear that AVs and the infrastructure that supports AVs will develop and use a great deal of data. We have issued a white paper on this topic to address some of the concerns around privacy and commercialisation of that data. The regulatory infrastructure will need to be updated to reflect a wider view of essential sharing than is currently contemplated by the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in order to ensure that vehicles, people and the infrastructure can communicate effectively without an inordinate number of consent notices.
The government has recognised that there may need to be some specific regulations made in relation to connected AVs and it is developing evidence around this area. It is also participating in international groups, recognising that there will need to be a transnational approach taken to data protection.
Yes. In the course of the consultation, other points were raised:
This article was first published on Lexis®PSL on 25 January 2017. Click for a free trial of Lexis®PSL.
Interviewed by Alex Heshmaty.
The views expressed by our Legal Analysis interviewees are not necessarily those of the proprietor.
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