The National Highway Safety Administration (NHTSA) has implementing anew policythat mandates automakers report incidents involving vehicles with semi and fully autonomous systems within 24 hours of being notified of a crash.

According to theStanding General Orderissued on Tuesday, this applies to all vehicles equipped with aLevel 2 advanced driver assistance system (ADAS) or with a Level 3 to 5 automated driving system (ADS), in case the systems are engaged during or right before the accident.

All car companies operating such vehicles on the US public roads must report electronically through a form any crash that also involves:

What’s more, an updated report is due 10 days after learning of the crash, while reports must be updated monthly with new or additional information.

The 💜 of EU tech

The latest rumblings from the EU tech scene, a story from our wise ol' founder Boris, and some questionable AI art. It’s free, every week, in your inbox. Sign up now!

If car makers fail to comply with the order, they riskfines of up to $22,992 per day, and a maximum penalty reaching more than $100 million.

As perDr. Steven Cliff, NHTSA’s Acting Administrator:

NHTSA’s core mission is safety. By mandating crash reporting, the agency will have access to critical data that will help quickly identify safety issues that could emerge in these automated systems. In fact, gathering data will help instill public confidence that the federal government is closely overseeing the safety of automated vehicles. In fact, gathering data will help instill public confidence that the federal government is closely overseeing the safety of automated vehicles.

The agency’s new rules come at a critical moment.

With companies like Waymo and Cruise having the green light for testing their autonomous fleets, and with some recent high-profile crashes involving automated systems (yes, I’m clearly insinuatingTesla), the need to establish appropriate regulations is crucial.

If (semi)autonomous vehicles are to be part of our lives, then they can’t operate, as up until now, within regulatory gray areas. Personally, I’m glad NHTSA isn’t joking about vehicle and road safety.

Do EVs excite your electrons? Do ebikes get your wheels spinning? Do self-driving cars get you all charged up?

Then you need the weekly SHIFT newsletter in your life.Click here to sign up.

Story byIoanna Lykiardopoulou

Ioanna is a writer at TNW. She covers the full spectrum of the European tech ecosystem, with a particular interest in startups, sustainabili(show all)Ioanna is a writer at TNW. She covers the full spectrum of the European tech ecosystem, with a particular interest in startups, sustainability, green tech, AI, and EU policy. With a background in the humanities, she has a soft spot for social impact-enabling technologies.

Get the TNW newsletter

Get the most important tech news in your inbox each week.

Also tagged with