The race to build the world’s first production autonomous vehicle is on, and Japan’s increasingly aging population would make an excellent market for a car that can drive itself. The Japanese government has granted an autonomous Nissan Leaf a license plate, making it the first road-legal self-driving car in the island nation.
Nissan hopes to start selling self-driving cars as soon as 2020, and this license goes a long way towards that goal. Nissan also believes that self-driving cars and electric vehicles go hand-in-hand, which is why the LEAF was chosen as the test vehicle.
For now, Nissan is going to keep testing its self-driving Leaf on public roads, analyzing the data and improving the technology until it is ready for prime time.
Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk hopes to deliver an electric car that can handle 90% of the driving by 2017, though Ford’s Alan Mulally seems to think the technology is a bit farther out.
Regardless, Nissan is well on its way to a self-driving car, and the Japanese government seems a bit more open-minded to autonomous vehicles than the average America.
That could give Japanese automakers a leg-up on American and European competition.
The last of more than 1,500 steel towers, each weighing around 60 tonnes, has been…
We're having a break to rest, reflect and reboot.
A flurry of late orders has broken the wind investment drought in Australia, with global…
Electricity prices can be kept near today’s levels in a post-coal National Electricity Market, but…
A legal move to extinguish any native claims over land proposed to host the giant…
We discuss some of the major events of the past year - the dominance of…