Skip to main content

Australia’s laws are ‘not ready for driverless vehicles’

Australia’s National Transport Commission (NTC) has released Regulatory Options for Automated Vehicles, a discussion paper that finds a number of legislative barriers to increasing vehicle automation. The paper proposes that there are barriers that need to be addressed as soon as possible to ensure clarity around the status of more automated vehicles on Australia’s roads and to support further trials. In the longer term other legislative barriers will need to be addressed to allow fully driverless vehic
May 13, 2016 Read time: 3 mins
Australia’s National Transport Commission (NTC) has released Regulatory Options for Automated Vehicles, a discussion paper that finds a number of legislative barriers to increasing vehicle automation.

The paper proposes that there are barriers that need to be addressed as soon as possible to ensure clarity around the status of more automated vehicles on Australia’s roads and to support further trials.  In the longer term other legislative barriers will need to be addressed to allow fully driverless vehicles in the future.

The discussion paper builds upon the issues paper released by the NTC in February 2016 and the 32 submissions made by stakeholders.

According to NTC, some of the questions that will need to be resolved include: How can governments enable on-road trials of automated vehicles nationally?; How can governments help clarify who is controlling a vehicle when the human driver is not driving? Or when control can alternate between a human and an automated driving system?; How should the requirement that a driver must have proper control of a vehicle be interpreted by police when there is no human driver?; What should happen to the range of laws that put obligations on a human driver of a vehicle such as rendering assistance after a crash, complying with directions from police or paying any tolls or fines incurred.

It is also not clear whether people injured in a crash with an automated vehicle will always be able to claim insurance under compulsory third party insurance or state-based accident compensation schemes.

“Australia’s laws need to be ready for the biggest change to our transport system since cars replaced horses,” said Paul Retter, NTC commissioner and chief executive. “Amending these laws shouldn’t be hard, but making sure the new laws are nationally consistent and encourage innovation while ensuring the safety of all road users will be important.”

Retter said Australian governments must ensure that the removal of these barriers and any new requirements were implemented in a logical sequence, in step with the commercial deployment of different automated vehicles. He said there were risks in trying to rush ahead and amend vehicle standards for fully automated vehicles (such as driverless pods) without first addressing existing barriers to the types of automated vehicles that we are likely to be see on our roads in the near future. Automated vehicles that share the driving task with humans are expected to be available in Australia within the next few years. As such the NTC is keen to hear views from all parts of industry and the community about the timing, as well as the detail of any reforms.

Retter called on interested parties to make a submission to help ensure Australia reaps the full benefits of automated vehicles as soon as possible. Submissions can be made at %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal www.ntc.gov.au Visit www.ntc.gov.au false http://www.ntc.gov.au/ false false%> between now and 4 July 2016.The NTC will analyse these submissions when making final recommendations to Australia’s transport ministers for their scheduled meeting in November 2016.

Related Content

  • Toshiba introduces new super charge ion battery
    September 10, 2014
    Electricity is in the air – and in Toshiba’s new super charge ion battery (SCiB), on display at ITS World Congress. SCiB batteries can be charged in five to 10 minutes, compared with the traditional overnight charging required for applications such as electric buses. SCiB charges even faster than current fast charge batteries, which take 30 minutes. The ultra-fast charging is possible because SCiB can tolerate a high current of 400 amps, almost three times higher than today’s normal fast charging batt
  • Cubic wins contract to mobilize LA Metro TAP Fare Payment System
    January 4, 2018
    Cubic Transportation Systems has been awarded a contract by the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Authority (LA Metro), to deliver an integrated traveller app in support of the TAP regional contactless fare system. It is designed with the intention of allowing users to make a fare purchase, use their mobile device as a TAP card and complete their journey using transit, bikeshare, or other multimodal programs. It will also provide them with commute information. TAP links 24 transit agencies across the Los
  • Appyparking exhibits platform to help drivers and cities
    March 19, 2018
    Appyparking is using Intertraffic to showcase a connected car platform that is said to bridge mapping, data, Internet of Things and payments drivers to provide users with more choice for destinations. The solution aims to save drivers time and money while also reducing congestion and pollution in cities. The product is part of the company’s ambition to create an urban transport application programming interface for kerbside navigation that can integrate into intelligent mobility applications which has
  • iMobility Challenge event
    November 12, 2014
    The next iMobility Challenge event, "Intelligent Mobility, Smart Cities" takes place in Brussels on 18 November 2014. Experts from innovation companies and researchers will share the latest ideas and developments in the field of intelligent mobility, sharing insights into how we will move forward in cities tomorrow, and what future vehicles will look like. Confirmed keynote speakers include John Baekelsmans, CTO at Cisco; other key speakers will be Rupert Fausset, Principal Sustainability Advisor at F