Skip to main content

Study: As cars gain autonomy, roads may become more clogged

Beijing traffic jam
Xinhuanet
As cars grow more autonomous, they will eventually be sent to run errands on their own. Upside? Convenience and time savings. Downside? Our roads could become more crowded than ever, and that’s a significant infrastructure concern, according to the Associated Press.

Accounting firm KPMG looked at the future and saw that roads could be close to three times as crowded as they are now. Working with focus groups in Atlanta, Denver, and Chicago, KPMG identified two groups likely to increase their travel significantly with the advent of driverless cars. People ages 16 to 25 and older than 65 will be the biggest users when companies like Lyft and Uber start providing driverless car service.

Recommended Videos

KPMG’s Gary Silberg compared driverless car service to smartphones. “It will be indispensable to your life,” he said. “It will be all sorts of things we can’t even think of today.”

Driverless cars with passengers will be the first component of potential traffic overload. KPMG’s analysis predicted that step is likely to add a potential extra 2 trillion miles of travel in the U.S. a year by 2050, just from the two age groups they identified as the heaviest users. With current miles traveled set at 3.1 trillion miles a year, the prospect of 60-plus percent more traffic is already a big jump. KPMG also predicted that driverless cars without passengers could double the increase again. If the expected self-driving car advantages of safety, speed, and lower cost also result in more discretionary travel, the total annual miles traveled could hit 8 trillion.

Another factor  is whether people will take cars rather than airplanes for short trips of just a few hundred miles. Once there are roads or traffic lanes restricted to autonomous cars only, speed limits could be increased because the human factor currently responsible for 90 percent of accidents would be removed. If a driverless car can pick you up at home, travel safely and inexpensively to a destination 200 to 300 miles away at 100-plus miles per hour, and then drop you off directly at your destination, why take a plane?

It may be that once driverless cars are in the majority, congestion won’t matter as much. Humans won’t perceive traffic as a waste of personal time when they send cars on errands. Also, without human drivers, robot cars, with or without passengers, will be able to zip around quickly and safely to make up for the extra vehicles on the road and extra miles traveled. The traffic pain is likely to be at its worst when autonomous car technology is revving up but still needs to share roads with people-driven cars.

Bruce Brown
Bruce Brown Contributing Editor   As a Contributing Editor to the Auto teams at Digital Trends and TheManual.com, Bruce…
Are EVs more expensive than gas cars? It’s complicated
Front three quarter view of the 2022 Volvo C40 Recharge electric car.

Cost is a major consideration no matter what kind of car you're buying. Electric vehicles are great options for helping to save the environment, but what use is that if they're outside of your budget? Let's take a look at the factors that go into pricing electric vehicles and see how they stack up against traditional cars.

Do electric vehicles cost more than traditional cars?
Electric vehicles have a higher up-front cost than gas cars but are less expensive over the course of their lifetime, primarily due to cheaper fuel. Several studies break down this total cost of ownership. Consumer Reports estimates that "for all EVs analyzed, the lifetime ownership costs were many thousands of dollars lower than all comparable ICE (internal combustion engines) vehicles’ costs, with most EVs offering savings of between $6,000 and $10,000."

Read more
A weird thing just happened with a fleet of autonomous cars
A passenger getting into a Cruise robotaxi.

In what must be one of the weirder stories linked to the development of autonomous vehicles, a fleet of Cruise self-driving cars gathered together at an intersection in San Francisco earlier this week, parked up, and blocked traffic for several hours. And to be clear: No, they weren't supposed to do that.

Some observers may have thought they were witnessing the start of the robot uprising, but the real reason for the mishap was more prosaic: An issue with the platform's software.

Read more
Officers confused as they pull over an empty self-driving car
Cruise

In what appears to be the first incident of its kind, police officers recently pulled over a self-driving car with no one inside it.

The incident, which took place on a street in San Francisco earlier this month, was caught on video by a passing pedestrian. It shows several traffic cops pondering about how to handle the incident after stopping the vehicle for failing to have its front lights on while driving at night.

Read more