Over 1,200 driverless cars recalled over crashes in the US

Los Angeles, California-December 26, 2024: A Waymo autonomous taxi picks up passengers in Downtown Los Angeles. The City of LA allows for self driving taxis driven by AI and Lidar Sensors under a pilot program.
A Waymo autonomous taxi picks up passengers in Downtown Los Angeles (Picture: Getty Images)

An American ride-hailing company has recalled more than 1,200 of its driverless cars after more than two dozen minor crashes.

Waymo, which is owned by Google-parent Alphabet, on Monday recalled some of its 5th Generation Automated Driving Systems with software released before November 7.

‘The software may cause the vehicles to collide with certain roadway barriers, such as chains and gates,’ states the recall notice posted by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), which aims to prevent injuries and save lives.

A total of 1,212 units are subject to the recall.

It comes after the company learned of 16 collisions its self-driving vehicles had with barriers including chains and gates from 2022 to the end of last year.

There were no injuries reported related to the faulty software.

The NHTSA began investigating the Waymo vehicles a year ago after instances of them possibly breaking traffic safety laws.

Some of the incidents ‘involved collisions with clearly visible objects that a competent driver would be expected to avoid’, the NHTSA found.

Waymo said it updated the software to fix the bug and it was deployed across the fleet in December.

It comes more than a year after Tesla recalled more than 362,000 of its vehicles in America over concerns that the self-driving technology could cause crashes.

The NHTSA determined that Tesla’s Full Self-Driving (FSD) Beta software did not adhere sufficiently to traffic safety laws, by allowing vehicles to ‘exceed speed limits or travel through intersections in an unlawful or unpredictable manner increases the risk of a crash’.

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