Skip to main content

Bosch expects to see self-driving cars in 10 years

Volvo Drive Me self-driving car program
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Several carmakers have big plans for self-driving cars, but the components needed to put those cars on the road will likely come from an array of suppliers.

Suppliers like Bosch, for example. The German company will soon roll out technology needed to let cars drive themselves on highways and autonomously change lanes, according to Automotive News (subscription required).

Recommended Videos

Bosch says it has contracts to supply radar, cameras, control units, and other equipment in 2017 and 2018. It’s part of a four-stage timetable the company plans to use to introduce the technology.

Beginning in 2017, Bosch plans to offer “integrated highway assist,” which allows a car to travel at speeds up to 75 mph on the highway, while remaining in its lane.

In 2018, this will be augmented with a “highway assist” system that allows the car to change lanes by itself. Both systems still require a human driver to monitor the road.

By 2020, Bosch expects to equip cars with a “highway pilot” that can essentially take over all driving tasks, although a human may need to intervene sometimes.

Finally, by 2025 Bosch plans to have an “auto pilot” system that can drive a car from point A to point B without any human involvement.

Bosch says it has a customer for the “integrated highway assist” and “highway assist” systems, but the other, more advanced systems aren’t ready for production yet.

The company already supplies components for traffic-jam assist to carmakers. This feature is basically a low-speed cruise control that allows cars to accelerate and brake themselves in traffic.

Bosch is also working with Google on its self-driving car project, supplying electric motors and long-range radar.

The company’s plans echo those of Mercedes-Benz, Nissan, Tesla, and other carmakers that plan to gradually introduce autonomous vehicles by building on systems that already offer limited self-driving capability.

With the first milestone on Bosch’s timeline just a couple of years away, we’ll soon see if those plans come to fruition.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
Cruise woes prompt production halt of fully driverless van
Interior of Cruise's Origin vehicle.

General Motors-owned  Cruise has halted production of its fully driverless vehicle -- the Origin -- just over a week after it suspended robotaxi operations nationwide following a number of troubling incidents involving its cars.

The news was announced by Cruise CEO Kyle Vogt during a meeting with staff on Monday, according to Forbes, which obtained audio of the gathering.

Read more
Cruise’s robotaxi service suspended by California regulator
A Cruise autonomous car.

Autonomous car startup Cruise has run into trouble in California after the state’s Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) said Tuesday it was suspending its deployment and driverless permits with immediate effect.

The dramatic intervention comes just a couple of months after General Motors-owned Cruise was given permission to operate robotaxi services around the clock, but also follows a number of troubling incidents involving self-driving Cruise cars on the streets of San Francisco, where it’s been carrying out tests on public roads in recent years.

Read more
Dubai Police to deploy driverless patrol cars with AI smarts
Dubai's autonomous patrol car.

While U.S. firms like Waymo and Cruise focus on ridesharing services with their autonomous vehicles, the United Arab Emirates' coastal city of Dubai is aiming to take the technology to another level by deploying it in police patrol cars.

Dubai Police recently announced plans to use fully electric, self-driving patrol cars in residential areas, local media reported this week.

Read more