Daimler's New Self-Driving Semi Drives Better Than A Person, So It's Better For The Environment
Another benefit of autonomous technology? Computer drivers means less air pollution—and cutting trucking's enormous carbon footprint.
In a single day, semi trucks on U.S. roads pump out over half a million metric tons of carbon pollution. The EPA hopes to change that with new requirements for better fuel economy
(a typical heavy-duty truck only drives five to six miles per gallon of
diesel fuel). In the future, self-driving technology could also help
cut down on fuel footprints.
In May, Daimler started testing the first autonomous truck in the
U.S. on Nevada roads, after introducing a similar version in Germany last year. Because the truck can accelerate and brake by itself, it does a better job of not wasting fuel.
"Driver variability plays a part in overall fuel economy," says Derek
Rotz, manager of advanced engineering at Daimler Trucks North America.
"A driver who adopts an efficient driving style will save more fuel than
a driver whose driving style is inefficient." The new self-driving
truck, which drives steadily in a single lane instead of impatiently
trying to get ahead, is estimated to be able to help cut fuel
consumption by 5%.
The truck is also designed to make things a little less tedious for
drivers stuck for hours on the road. While drivers can't sit back and do
nothing—the truck can't get on or off the highway by itself, change
lanes, or handle tricky weather conditions like snow—they can use the
truck's new controls on long, boring stretches of road.
When the truck detects that it's safe to drive itself, it shows an
alert, and the driver can hit a button and take their hands off the
wheel and feet off the pedals. Using the lane markings for guidance, the
truck steers through curves and automatically adjusts to traffic,
slowing down if a car pulls in front.
"It takes some of the cognitive workload off the driver," Rotz says.
"Just not having to focus as intently on the road." In tests, Daimler
monitored brain waves as drivers tried out the new trucks, and found
that they were more tired when they had to drive all the time
themselves. With the autonomous feature turned on, they became more
alert.
The technology takes time to adjust to. "From the start, and actually
until you get familiar with it you feel pretty cautious, you monitor
the what's going on closely, you may have a desire to grab the steering
wheel," says Rotz. "But once you start watching the vehicle and it stays
in its lane, and you start maneuvering through some curves, you become
comfortable with it because you understand how it works. And you just
let it take control."
Though the design is being tested now on highways, it's still in
development. "What we're talking about right now is still several years
out," Rotz says. Even after the technology is fully ready for use—and
after the manufacturer has brought down the cost enough for truckers to
start buying—the trucks won't actually see use unless regulations
change. Daimler is hoping for national laws, rather than state-by-state
approval.
In the meantime, trucks may be able to drastically cut emissions just
by adopting technology that will be available sooner; by 2017, trucks
could potentially cut fuel use by 35%.
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