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Better infrastructure will ease the journey of automated vehicles

15 June 2018

Serious crashes on inter-urban roads may be slashed by a quarter over the next 30-40 years with the introduction of automated vehicles.

But the ride may be far from smooth, with a mixed fleet transition and vital need for roads that cars can read, according to a new EuroRAP report report .

The report, the third in the “Roads that Cars Can Read” series, examines the relationship between road infrastructure and safety for conventional and increasingly-autonomous vehicles (AVs) and provides a framework for infrastructure safety investment.

EuroRAP Regional Director and report author Dr Steve Lawson said the shift to AVs is likely to take decades and alter the crash types and risks we’re dealing with, as well as crash liability and appropriate countermeasures for safety. Understanding these risks will be important to managing the transition with utmost safety.

“Increasing automation currently relies on clear road line markings and signs that can be reliably detected, and road users need to be able to anticipate AV manoeuvres accurately for safe, smooth traffic flow.

“Roads that cars can consistently and unequivocally read will be key to safety in the changeover period as the common factor of reliance for both driver-operated and automated vehicles,” Dr Lawson said.

The report, a joint initiative of EuroRAP, the UK Road Safety Foundation and International Road Assessment Programme (iRAP) summarises current crash patterns and countermeasures in Great Britain and illustrates with examples of crash countermeasures in the Netherlands and 14 countries through south-east Europe. It considers how each might change with the introduction of AVs.

The greatest crash risk for conventional vehicles on inter-urban roads involves run-off, head-on, intersection and shunt crashes. This is likely to change with the introduction of AVs as lane-keeping technology, enhanced road positioning, speed management, vehicle to vehicle connectivity and autonomous emergency braking comes into play.

Example crash scenarios and potential effects considered in the paper in a world when half of all travel is by autonomous vehicles include:

  • Rear-end shunt crashes may be reduced by 60-80% with distance-keeping devices in vehicles
  • Run-off crashes may be the easiest to counter – good signing and lining and in-vehicle lane-keeping support and speed control may reduce these crashes, especially on bends, by 60-80%
  • Head-on crashes may be reduced by 40-60% with the greatest effect for “overtaking head-on” more than “loss of control head-on” crashes
  • Vulnerable road user crashes may reduce by about 20-40%, assuming that pedestrians and cyclists benefit from AVs and that motorcyclists are relatively unaffected
  • Intersections may only achieve a 20-40% reduction because they are more complex, however signalised intersections may be prioritised over roundabouts for their signalised control. Some countermeasures, currently popular because of the protection they provide to car occupants (for example, roundabouts), may become less necessary, thereby also removing the heightened risk that some intersections provide, for example, to cyclists.

Countermeasures for crashes involving conventional vehicles, but also benefitting other road-users, may become more difficult to justify economically unless they also assist AVs – such as street lighting or anti-skid surfacing – and as particular crash types become less frequent, for example collisions with roadside hazards and head-on crashes).

New risks are likely to arise where road maintenance is poor: worn out road markings are easily missed by AV detection technology and could lead to crashes. Maintenance of infrastructure will be a key factor in the AV transition phase and become a higher-priority obligation for road authorities. As potential driver liability will decrease, liability of road authorities and vehicle manufacturers looks set to rise.

“As the evidence base grows for driver assistance technologies and AVs, the need for infrastructure Star Ratings specifically for the self-driving car can be explored, and by considering fleet penetration over time, optimum investment priorities for road users that will maximise lives saved per unit of investment can be established,” Dr Lawson said.

“Extensive road assessment surveys to benchmark network conditions, behavioural studies to monitor the interactions of AVs and conventional vehicles, and the establishment of policies for 3-star or better road infrastructure and to ensure common standards are set by road authorities are recommended future steps,” Dr Lawson said.

EuroRAP Chairman Ferry Smith said the long-term goal is zero road deaths. “Increasing vehicle safety will make a significant contribution but the transition to universal use of autonomous vehicles will, at best, take decades. What we do know is that in the transition to AVs, and probably beyond that period, roads that cars can read – through good and consistent signing and lining – will be essential, as AVs at various stages of transition, and drivers of vehicles without an autonomous function, continue to rely on them.

“The shift to AVs should be prepared and planned for now, but should not be a distraction from the life-saving work that can be done using conventional approaches to crash reduction,” he added.

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