The AV sector is optimistic that a second Trump administration could bring about a federal regulatory framework that would enable wider-scale deployment of self-driving cars on US roads.
Tech Brew caught up with industry analysts and stakeholders on how the process of establishing federal regulations could play out and what could be included.
“Will a federal AV regulatory framework help to spur investor confidence, consumer confidence, customer confidence? Absolutely,” Rich Steiner, VP of government relations for autonomous trucking company Gatik AI, told us. “Whenever the feds weigh into anything, I think it raises the level of confidence across all elements of the ecosystem.”
What we know: Last month, Bloomberg reported that Trump’s transition team was homing in on federal AV regs as a key priority for the Department of Transportation. Details are still in the works, but Bloomberg said federal rules could be established via federal legislation and DOT rulemaking.
One key way the federal government oversees AVs is via the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards, which are minimum requirements all vehicles must comply with. These include, for example, cars having driver controls like steering wheels and pedals––features that driverless cars theoretically don’t need.
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