Then there’s infrastructure to consider. Many of these new-generation cars require smooth roads, with clearly painted lines, to safely position themselves. Potholes, worn paint, and other irregularities—standard on too many of our roads—will potentially become even greater hazards. Our infrastructure is already severely underfunded. Where will the resources come from to maintain and repair roads and bridges to this new, higher standard?
And what about the interim period when conventional vehicles share the road with automated ones? One of the claims made for driverless cars is that they don’t need safety gear like heavy steel safety cages to protect passengers in a crash, making them lighter and more fuel-efficient. That’s great until an old-school pickup truck T-bones your Google car.
The risk of distracted driving is one of the strongest arguments for driverless cars. But distracted driving could be reduced simply by disabling phones in moving cars.
Driverless cars might eventually have many benefits. But at the moment, those potential benefits are outweighed by many problems.
—JAMIE LINCOLN KITMAN,
New York Bureau Chief, Automobile Magazine