US to loosen rules on Tesla, other carmakers taking on China in race for self-driving cars
- The Trump administration plans to ease safety requirements for self-driving vehicles to support U.S. Manufacturers against Chinese competition, according to Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy.
- The new rules will allow certain self-driving vehicles to operate without complete compliance with federal safety standards.
- The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration will streamline crash reporting for autonomous vehicles, which will help U.S. Automakers compete with China, as mentioned by the Transportation Department.
- Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy emphasized that the new framework will enhance innovation and safety standards in the race against China.
104 Articles
104 Articles
Revving Up: U.S. Accelerates Autonomous Vehicle Deployment
Revving Up: U.S. Accelerates Autonomous Vehicle Deployment The Trump administration has unveiled new regulations aimed at accelerating the deployment of self-driving vehicles, a move that saw Tesla's shares soar nearly 10% on Friday. Elon Musk, Tesla's CEO and a close adviser to President Donald Trump, has been vocal about launching commercial robotaxi services imminently.U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced that the new rules woul…
U.S. loosens safety rules for self-driving cars in a bid to compete with China
The Trump administration is loosening rules to help U.S. automakers like Elon Musk’s Tesla develop self-driving cars so they can take on Chinese rivals. U.S. companies developing self-driving cars will be allowed exemptions from certain federal safety rules for testing purposes, the Transportation Department said Thursday. The department also said it will streamline crash reporting requirements involving self-driving software that Musk has criti…
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