Autonomous Vehicles Will Soon Be Safer Than Humans, Some Already Are (2024)

The promise of autonomous vehicles has been a long time coming. While many are still waiting to see the fruits of all this work, there are some cities like Arizona and San Francisco where autonomous cars are starting to become a reality. Furthermore, IDTechEx's new industry report "Autonomous Cars, Robotaxis and Sensors 2024-2044" predicts a coming rapid growth in the number of cities that will offer robotaxi services in the next few years. So, with robotaxis rapidly becoming an everyday reality, the industry and experts must ask, are autonomous robotaxis safe enough?

Autonomous Vehicles Will Soon Be Safer Than Humans, Some Already Are (1)

Miles per disengagement is used as a proxy measure of safety and performance. "Best 3" is the average performance of each year's top 3 performing companies. Source: IDTechEx

This summer, the robotaxi industry has seen more commercialization activity, with both Waymo and Cruise being given the green light by the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) to expand their commercial services in San Francisco. But only weeks after that announcement, San Francisco has seen protests around the deployment of autonomous vehicles, and California DMV has halved the number of vehicles that Cruise is permitted to have in testing. Some inhabitants of San Francisco are becoming disenfranchised with the city's perpetual status as a proving ground for this technology, with a group called Safe Street Rebel leading the protests. Their disruption mechanism is called coning and involves placing a traffic cone on the bonnet of autonomous vehicles, rendering it inoperable until the cone is removed — a somewhat embarrassing situation considering all the vehicles' technology.

So, are autonomous vehicles really that unsafe and not ready for the news, or is this protest more about the city's technology testbed status? Waymo claims on its website that it outperforms human drivers when mitigating and avoiding collisions, but what does the data out of California say?

Autonomous vehicle safety is an area that IDTechEx's autonomous vehicle experts have tracked closely and carefully as autonomous car testing has proliferated. IDTechEx uses data from the California DMV to understand how autonomous vehicles are performing and improving over the years. When assessing the safety of autonomous vehicles, several metrics can be considered: how many testing miles has each company amassed, how often does the safety driver need to intervene with the autonomous system, and how often does the autonomous system cause a crash?

A key metric that IDTechEx uses to monitor autonomous vehicle safety is miles per disengagement. This measures how frequently, or hopefully how infrequently, the autonomous vehicle safety driver needs to intervene with the autonomous system. IDTechEx has measured this since 2015 and has seen exponential growth in the performance of autonomous vehicles. Back in 2015, Waymo recorded 424,000 miles of autonomous testing, during which its safety drivers disengaged the system 341 times, meaning there was an average of approximately 1,200 miles between disengagements. Waymo were the best company by this metric that year. For reference, IDTechEx estimates that human drivers in the US average approximately 200,000 miles between collisions. If it is assumed that each of Waymo's disengagements would lead to a collision, which is slightly unfair against the autonomous driver, then it would be around 0.5% as safe as a human driver.

However, the autonomous vehicle industry has made significant progress since then. In fact, IDTechEx has since the number of miles per disengagement nearly doubled year on year.

Autonomous Vehicles Will Soon Be Safer Than Humans, Some Already Are (2)

The number of testing miles submitted by the top testing companies in California between 2015 and 2022. Source: IDTechEx

In 2022, Cruise were the leader when it came to disengagement performance, with a score of nearly 96,000 miles per disengagement, nearly 50% as safe as humans. During its 863,000 miles of testing, safety drivers only needed to intervene with the system nine times. As part of IDTechEx's research in "Autonomous Cars, Robotaxis and Sensors 2024-2044", IDTechEx looks closely at the disengagements and collisions in which autonomous vehicles are involved. Doing so uncovers a surprising fact: four out of the nine disengagements were caused by the poor performance of other nearby drivers. If these are removed from the equation, then Cruise's miles per disengagement score shoots up to over 170,000, 85% of the way to the rate at which humans have collisions.

Miles per disengagement is only a proxy for autonomous vehicle safety, though. Since a safety driver has intervened, it is impossible to know whether the car would have collided or not. Instead, perhaps the number of collisions that autonomous vehicles are involved in should be considered.

Between January 2019 and May 2023, the autonomous vehicle companies testing across California submitted more than 450 collision reports. These reports cover a wide range of collision types, from collisions with other vehicles to hitting curbs and even the vehicles being attacked by pedestrians. As part of IDTechEx's research, its analysts have read and analyzed each of these reports, finding that only 3.4% of collisions could be attributed to the poor performance of the autonomous system. Another way to look at it is that in 2022, the autonomous driver would cause collisions at a rate of 1 collision per 1.3 million miles, significantly better than human drivers. But this is with a human behind the wheel monitoring the system. What about when the system has no human safety net? How much do they collide then?

Since 2020, California has allowed driverless autonomous testing on its streets, and two companies have taken advantage of this. Waymo and Cruise. Between 2021 and 2022, Waymo has recorded just under 70,000 miles of driverless activity. On the other hand, Cruise only started recording driverless miles in 2022 but submitted a staggering 590,000 miles. During those miles, the vehicles were involved in 15 collisions, i.e., 1 collision every ~40,000 miles, or 5 times more often than their human counterparts.

One point of redemption is that these miles were exclusively accumulated in San Francisco, one of the toughest driving environments in the US for autonomous systems. But also tough for humans. With the slower speeds and increased pedestrian presence, IDTechEx estimates that the collision rate amongst human drivers increases from one per ~200,000 miles (the US average across all road types) to one in every 107,000 miles, only half as good, but still better than autonomous drivers.

There is one other statistic that should be considered when talking about the safety performance of autonomous vehicles. Of those 450+ collisions recorded by the companies testing autonomous cars, none involved a major injury or death. In the 4 years of testing, from 2019 to 2022, that is nearly 14 million miles without a serious injury or fatality. NHTSA say that with human drivers, a fatality happens roughly once per 75 million miles of human driving. So autonomous vehicles still have a way to go to catch up, but it is looking promising.

Whether you look at miles per disengagement, miles per collision, or miles per fatality, humans still have a better track record than autonomous vehicles. However, human safety has been fairly stagnant. The rate at which we crash is not changing that much, and further improvement is mostly coming from crash mitigation technology, such as automatic emergency braking systems and blind spot detection. One thing that can be said for autonomous vehicles is that their safety has been improving at somewhat of an exponential rate. Something that humans are very unlikely to mimic.

IDTechEx does not believe that autonomous vehicles are as safe as humans yet, nor are they ready for widespread unsupervised deployment. The rate of improvement that autonomous technologies have shown demonstrates that there is the potential for them to far exceed human levels of safety in the future, leading us toward a world in which we stop questioning whether autonomous cars are ready and start questioning whether human drivers are safe enough.

To find out more about the IDTechEx report "Autonomous Cars, Robotaxis and Sensors 2024-2044", including downloadable sample pages, please visit www.IDTechEx.com/autonomouscars.

IDTechEx guides your strategic business decisions through its Research, Subscription and Consultancy products, helping you profit from emerging technologies. For more information, contact research@IDTechEx.com or visit www.IDTechEx.com.

Autonomous Vehicles Will Soon Be Safer Than Humans, Some Already Are (2024)

FAQs

Autonomous Vehicles Will Soon Be Safer Than Humans, Some Already Are? ›

The research found that autonomous or self-driving vehicles had lower accident rates than humans in work zones, traffic events, and “pre-accident movements” like slowing down and proceeding straight.

Are autonomous vehicles safer than humans? ›

Autonomous vehicles (AVs) are generally safer than those driven by human drivers except in certain scenarios. Two of the common scenarios that present problems for AVs are when performing turns and in low-low light conditions.

How likely are autonomous vehicles to crash? ›

Autonomous Car Accident Statistics

In 2021, the National Law Review reported that the average self-driving car accident rate was 9.1 per million miles driven. In comparison, the accident rate for traditional vehicles is 4.1 accidents per million miles.

How safe are self-driving cars and are they really the future? ›

The safety of these automated systems is, quite rightly, under constant review. Last year, The Independent reported that self-driving cars were involved in 400 crashes, while in more recent news, a San Francisco pedestrian was found trapped under a driverless car.

Should autonomous vehicles replace human drivers? ›

Autonomous vehicles have the potential to replace human drivers due to their ability to improve road safety, traffic flow, and mobility for individuals who cannot drive.

How safe are fully autonomous vehicles? ›

What are the safety benefits of automated vehicles? Types of automated technologies, such as advanced driver assistance system technologies already in use on the roads and future automated driving systems at their mature state, have the potential to reduce crashes, prevent injuries, and save lives.

What are the negative effects of autonomous vehicles? ›

A malicious attacker could find and exploit security holes in any number of complex systems to take over a car or even cause it to crash purposefully. Furthermore, driverless cars of the future will likely be networked in order to communicate with each other and send and receive data about other vehicles on the road.

Why we shouldn't have autonomous vehicles? ›

One of the biggest problems with self-driving cars is that they may not be entirely safe. A driverless vehicle needs to process its surroundings to make judgment calls using perception and decision-making technology.

Who is responsible for a fully autonomous car crash? ›

However, if the car was on autopilot and essentially “driverless” at the time of the crash, the driver may not have been negligent. Instead, the cause of the crash may have been a defect in the vehicle. It follows that liability would fall on the vehicle's manufacturer.

What is the biggest problem with self-driving cars? ›

Learning about the top five dangers of using self-driving cars will help you understand the risks of autonomous vehicles.
  • Vehicle crashes: Automated systems can malfunction. ...
  • Pedestrian accidents: Automated systems don't respond to people or animals. ...
  • Self-driving cars are fire hazards. ...
  • Hacking. ...
  • Health risks.

How close are we to autonomous vehicles? ›

According to recent predictions, the automotive industry will not develop a fully self-driving car until 2035. So, while everyone agrees that autonomous vehicles are the future, there is plenty of debate about how soon this future will arrive.

Are Tesla self-driving cars safe? ›

A safety group graded 14 driver-assistance systems. Tesla's self-driving option was the worst. Automated driving systems are lacking in the safety department, according to a new report. Tesla's Full Self Driving system earned the worst marks, but most of the 14 systems tested poorly.

How much safer is self-driving? ›

While generally safer, so-called self-driving cars are five times more likely to crash in low light conditions and twice as likely to crash while turning compared with human drivers.

Do we really need autonomous vehicles? ›

Fewer traffic jams save fuel and reduce greenhouse gases from needless idling. Automated driving systems may reduce unnecessary braking and acceleration that waste fuel. Vehicles with fully automated driving systems may be able to travel more closely together, reducing air drag and thereby reducing fuel use.

Is AI driving safer than human driving? ›

One of the largest accident studies yet suggests self-driving cars may be safer than human drivers in routine circ*mstances – but it also shows the technology struggles more than humans during low-light conditions and when performing turns.

Is Tesla autopilot safer than human drivers? ›

a. In the 4th quarter of 2022, we recorded one crash for every 4.85 million miles driven in which drivers were using Autopilot technology. For drivers who were not using Autopilot technology, we recorded one crash for every 1.40 million miles driven.

What makes a driverless car safer than a car driven by a person? ›

Autonomous cars are better at avoiding rear-end accidents because they have advanced sensors that can analyse their surrounding environment. “We may conclude … that human drivers may not react as quickly or may not notice the object in time to take appropriate action,” the report reads.

Will the self-driving cars or driverless cars be safe? ›

As the cars will be programmed so this will remove any human error which might lead to some accident. Moreover, these cars will be able to communicate with each other wirelessly which will ultimately reduce accident probabilities and we can say driverless car are safer than the driven cars.

How autonomous vehicles affect health? ›

In addition, AVs may contribute to public health by mitigating congestion and emission reduction, which leads to lower diseases associated with air pollution (Crayton & Meier, 2017; Hardy & Liu, 2017), non-exhaust emissions (Rojas-Rueda et al., 2020) and noise (Rojas-Rueda et al., 2020).

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