Skip to main content

Advanced automatic braking could reduce accidents

Sophisticated new automatic braking technology could boost road safety and reduce accident levels. Car manufacturers are poised to make the introduction of Autonomous Emergency Braking (AEB) technology across a wide array of new models due for launch. Some AEB systems have been fitted to a number of, mostly high-end, models from firms including Audi, Ford, Honda, Jaguar, Lexus, Mercedes, Volvo and VW.
August 8, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Sophisticated new automatic braking technology could boost road safety and reduce accident levels. Car manufacturers are poised to make the introduction of Autonomous Emergency Braking (AEB) technology across a wide array of new models due for launch. Some AEB systems have been fitted to a number of, mostly high-end, models from firms including 6336 Audi, 3423 Ford, 2288 Honda, 6337 Jaguar, 6338 Lexus, 2796 Mercedes, 2394 Volvo and 3503 Volkswagen. But the ongoing development of the technology has reduced the cost of the systems and manufacturers are now ready for more widespread introductions. The AEB technology can reduce the risk of nose to tail car crashes that occur often in slow moving traffic, when a moment’s inattention can result in one vehicle running into the rear of another that has already stopped. AEB could also offer major safety benefits for vulnerable road users such as pedestrians, cyclists and motorcyclists, with crash data showing these categories are all too often the victims of inattention by car, van truck and bus drivers.

For motorists overall, the technology could make major savings, in the short term at least, for insurance costs. Eliminating the cost of crash repairs resulting from minor incidents could ensure insurance premiums stay low. Some insurance firms plan to offer lower premiums to drivers of vehicles with AEB technology also. The technology may use either lidar or video systems, or a combination of both, to determine when a vehicle (or vulnerable road user) is in front.

A study by the 2465 European Commission has pointed to a reduction in accidents of up to 27%, possibly saving as many as 8,000 lives/year, offering massive cost savings and cutting congestion.

Commercial vehicles will be required to have AEB fitted to gain European Type Approval from November 2013. Euro 1199 NCAP has said that it will include AEB in its safety assessment from 2014. Euro NCAP divides AEB systems into three groups: urban systems that only work below 30km/h; inter-urban systems that operate at higher speeds; pedestrian systems that are more sophisticated and as yet, only available from Lexus and Volvo. The other manufacturers are working on the technology for this last group and will be offering it shortly.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • FOI request reveals “shocking” amount of uninsured UK drivers
    July 30, 2013
    One in every 100 people in the UK with a full driving licence has points for driving uninsured, according to a “shocking” Freedom of Information (FOI) request by the IAM (Institute of Advanced Motorists). For all ages the request, directed to the DVLA, revealed that one in every 200 people with a full UK driving licence had been penalised for driving without insurance. A total of 226,803 drivers in the UK were said under FOI to have points on their licence for driving while uninsured.
  • Austrian highway firm opposing larger trucks
    June 19, 2012
    Concern has been expressed in Austria over the potential costs of upgrading the country’s road network to cope with 60tonne trucks measuring up to 25.5m long. The introduction of these massive ‘gigaliners’ has been proposed across the EC. But Austrian highway operator Asfinag has said that upgrading the country’s roads, highways, bridges and tunnels to make them suitable for gigaliners would cost some €5.4billion. Asfinag has also expressed its concern over the safety issues surrounding these vehicles due t
  • Road safety gain for UK in 2013
    June 26, 2014
    The UK’s Department for Transport (DfT) reveals that the road fatality rate for 2013 was the lowest since records began in 1926. The data shows that 1,713 people died on the UK’s road network in 2013, around half that of the figure recorded for the year 2000. This reveals an on-going improvement in road safety levels. The DfT statistics show that in 2013, 21,657 people were seriously injured in road crashes, while the total number of casualties of all severities stood at 183,670. Car occupant fatalities in
  • New driver video systems could cut crashes
    May 13, 2014
    A study into new technologies by The Virginia Tech Transportation Institute (VTTI) in the US reveals that advanced video systems could cut crashes. VTTI’s report analysed collisions involving heavy trucks and buses and found that Lytx’s video-based driver safety system could save lives and reduce injuries. The study concluded that heavy trucks and buses using the DriveCam powered by Lytx Program could reduce fatalities, collisions and injuries. “If driver behavior is the primary reason for traffic crashes,