Nissan
Industryweek 12339 Nissan Serena
Industryweek 12339 Nissan Serena
Industryweek 12339 Nissan Serena
Industryweek 12339 Nissan Serena
Industryweek 12339 Nissan Serena

Nissan to Roll Out Autopilot-Like Feature in Japan

July 13, 2016
The ProPilot system lets the Nissan Serena accelerate, brake and navigate bumper-to-bumper highway traffic in a single lane.

Nissan Wednesday rolled out new features that will let one of its minivans handle some driving on its own, as a similar system made by US-based Tesla is probed over crashes.

Japan's number-two automaker said its ProPilot system was designed to let its newest Serena model, which is scheduled to go on sale in Japan in late August, accelerate, brake and navigate bumper-to-bumper highway traffic in a single lane.

The technology, which relies on an internal camera to gauge the vehicle's location, will be available in the minivan next month.

But Nissan warned it was still some way off its goal to put fully self-driving cars on the road by 2020, when Tokyo hosts the summer Olympics.

Automakers are focused on creating fully autonomous cars, which would allow drivers to read, watch a movie, or even send emails, but the idea has sparked safety concerns.

Japanese firms, including Nissan and rivals Toyota and Honda, have been taking a gradual approach, focusing on aspects such as self-parking and crash-avoidance technology.

"The point is it's not fully autonomous driving, but driver assistance technology, so it can't handle everything for you," Hideyuki Sakamoto, a Nissan executive vice president, told reporters Wednesday.

The rollout came as US highway safety officials investigate two crashes, including a fatal accident, involving cars made by Tesla that may have been operating on its pioneering self-drive Autopilot technology.

Tesla boss Elon Musk has defended the company's technology -- the most advanced driver-assist system currently available to consumers -- as on the balance safer than regular cars.

But worries have mounted that the feature has faults, including not being able to recognise cars halted on the road, and that drivers are being lulled into a false sense of safety and not watching the road.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2016

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