Volvo is planning to deploy the technology, which will allow
the car to fully take over driving tasks in some limited situations, in a
forthcoming all-electric SUV that Volvo plans to announce later this year.
Volvo plans to offer the self-driving feature as a
subscription upgrade to customers after vehicles have already hit the road.
Alexander Petrofski, vice president of strategy and business ownership at
Volvo, said during a press conference at the Consumer Electronics Show that the
cars will go on sale in 2023, but Volvo has not set a date for when Ride Pilot
will be available.
Instead, Volvo has said Ride Pilot will not be turned on for
customers until it has undergone a "rigorous verification and testing
protocol."
The companies said they want to begin testing Ride Pilot
later on pre-production vehicles this year in California, pending regulatory
approvals. But when production vehicles hit the road starting next year, they
will come standard with simpler driver-safety technologies that will help
gather up data to validate the Ride Pilot technology before it is released.
"I'm envisioning we will steer some of our sales to
California in order to get the vehicle density" to help collect data,
Petrofski said.
Volvo declined to say how much the subscription to upgrade
to Ride Pilot will cost.
"We believe a large portion of our revenue in the
future will come from software sales," Petrofski said.
Luminar will provide what is known as a lidar sensor, a key
part of the system that helps the car gain a three-dimensional map of the road.
But the vehicle will also rely on an array of five radar sensors, eight cameras
and sixteen ultrasonic sensors, all tied together with software from Swedish
firm Zensact. © Reuters
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