Friday, November 28, 2025
15.1 C
New Delhi

Germany’s bid to lead in autonomous driving faces roadblocks

Germany's bid to lead in autonomous driving faces roadblocks

AI-Generated Image

On the grounds of Paderborn Airport, engineer Michael Spengler demonstrates how far self-driving technology has come in Germany. He enters a route into his smartphone, taps a button and rests his hands in his lap. The small car begins to roll, navigating at a leisurely 7 kilometers per hour (4 mph) between buildings and parked vehicles.”It can go faster — 20 to 25 kilometers per hour is no problem,” the researcher from Augsburg University of Applied Sciences said while sitting in the driver’s seat, only as a safeguard, he explained, ready to take over if something goes wrong.Cameras, radar, so-called Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) sensors and a high-performance computer keep the car on course. After a short loop, the vehicle brakes on its own at the destination, where a crowd waits to also get a first taste of autonomous driving.The event was organised by NeMo (New Mobility) Paderborn, a coalition of 75 partners from academia and industry. Like several other consortia across the country, it hopes to help Germany claim a leadership role in the technology.But the challenges are steep in Germany. High car ownership, a strong taxi lobby and a well-developed public transit network leave little room for newcomers to the mobility market. Many projects have fizzled out once government funding dried up.

The energy-efficient swarm

Germany has authorised Level 4 autonomy, which allows passengers to sleep, work or watch movies while traveling, provided vehicles operate on preapproved routes or under remote supervision.But according to the German motorists’ association ADAC, progress is slow partly because it is absolutely unthinkable for German manufacturers to go into series production with an immature system.And so, while driverless taxis are already a common sight in parts of the United States and China, German deployments remain limited to shuttles and minibuses on fixed, local routes.Several German towns and cities like Munich and Monheim are testing autonomous driving, and even though not a single accident has happened with such a car, conventional car drivers have reportedly been annoyed by their overly cautious driving style.NeMo wants to change that. Its concept involves a “swarm” of lightweight autonomous cabs handling short trips and first-and-last-mile connections. For longer distances, the cars can couple automatically to an autonomous tractor unit, forming a convoy before separating near their destinations.In late August, the first cabs were allowed to drive autonomously on airport grounds. The larger tractor vehicle is still under development, with the first commercial rollout expected in Paderborn by 2026.Energy efficiency is the project’s calling card. The cabs, designed for up to four passengers, are half the weight of a conventional car and carry only small batteries, limiting their range.To compensate, the tractor unit will “recharge them on the move, powered by its own battery, hydrogen tank and fuel cell,” said Thomas Tröster of Paderborn University, adding that traveling in the tractor unit’s slipstream also reduces the cabs’ energy consumption.”We’re not retrofitting existing cars for autonomy; we’re building entirely new vehicles,” Tröster told DW.

Rural mobility reimagined

Munich startup INYO is supplying the autonomous cars, while HOLON — a spinoff of German auto supplier Benteler — is developing the tractor units.The service is designed to be cheaper than a taxi but not much more expensive than going by bus. “It depends on whether passengers are willing to accept waiting times, have luggage and whether they accept others joining during the ride,” said Tröster. For example, a woman might want to book a vehicle for herself alone at night for an extra fee.NeMo describes the model as “individualised public transit”, especially suited to rural areas where buses are infrequent.Etteln, a village near Paderborn, is among them. In 2024, it was named the “world’s smartest” by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, the world’s largest professional association for technical professionals in electrical and electronic engineering.Speaking with DW, Etteln’s mayor, Ulrich Ahle, said the community has been running a so-called e-village car service for five years, in which people can book rides via smartphone. A service for residents without a driver’s license would be the “next logical step,” he said, adding that the Etteln had already created a 3D digital twin of the village, where the autonomous cabs have begun driving virtually.

From pilots to mainstream

Elsewhere, Germany’s biggest city experiments are moving faster. In Hamburg, transit operator Hochbahn is deploying about 20 autonomous vehicles in partnership with HOLON and Volkswagen subsidiary MOIA. The fleet will include minibuses for up to 15 passengers and Volkswagen (VW) electric cars for smaller groups.Initially, safety drivers will be present, but the vehicles will operate without fixed routes or schedules. Test users will be able to book rides via an app within a densely populated 37-square-kilometer zone.The Association of German Transport Companies (VDV) predicts the first regular Level 4 services could launch within five years. The vehicles are technically mature and legally permitted.But it cautions that autonomous driving won’t solve Germany’s traffic and land-use problems if it simply replaces the country’s 48 million private cars one-for-one. Instead, driverless fleets must be integrated into the public transit system, and scaling up will not come cheap. So, rather than continuing to finance temporary pilot projects, the industry group wants the German government to support a nationwide rollout. Only then, it argues, can the government live up to its pledge to become a global leader in autonomous mobility. Go to Source

Hot this week

Raja Krishnamoorthi slammed for his proposal to double H-1B visas to 130,000: ‘He’s serving India’

Indian-origin Democratic Congressman (Illinois) Raja Krishnamoorthi was criticized for reintroducing an Act that he proposed earlier to increase the number of H-1B visas available each year. Read More

Doda man arrested for inflammatory social media post

JAMMU: J&K Police arrested a man in Doda district on Friday for allegedly uploading communally sensitive and provocative content on social media that promoted enmity and disturbed public harmony. Read More

From ‘Blacks target Whites for fun’ to ‘all Swifties want is abortion’ — 10 quotes by Charlie Kirk that people won’t forget

Charlie Kirk, the slain MAGA activist, was an avid political debater and voiced his arguments in favor of biblical-evangelical and traditional conservative Christian views. Read More

NC claims ‘selective targeting’ of Kashmiris over Delhi car blast, urges states to protect them

SRINAGAR: J&K CM Omar Abdullah’s National Conference on Friday passed a resolution condemning what it termed “selective targeting” of Kashmiris in the aftermath of the Delhi car blast involving a terror module that a Read More

‘We must launch a 360-degree attack on narcotics and organised crime’: Amit Shah

Addressing the 60th all-India DGP/IGP conference in Raipur, Chhattisgarh, Shah said the security forces and the police are delivering strong blows to extremism, radicalisation and narcotics NEW DELHI: Stating that the Narendra Modi Read More

Topics

Raja Krishnamoorthi slammed for his proposal to double H-1B visas to 130,000: ‘He’s serving India’

Indian-origin Democratic Congressman (Illinois) Raja Krishnamoorthi was criticized for reintroducing an Act that he proposed earlier to increase the number of H-1B visas available each year. Read More

Doda man arrested for inflammatory social media post

JAMMU: J&K Police arrested a man in Doda district on Friday for allegedly uploading communally sensitive and provocative content on social media that promoted enmity and disturbed public harmony. Read More

From ‘Blacks target Whites for fun’ to ‘all Swifties want is abortion’ — 10 quotes by Charlie Kirk that people won’t forget

Charlie Kirk, the slain MAGA activist, was an avid political debater and voiced his arguments in favor of biblical-evangelical and traditional conservative Christian views. Read More

NC claims ‘selective targeting’ of Kashmiris over Delhi car blast, urges states to protect them

SRINAGAR: J&K CM Omar Abdullah’s National Conference on Friday passed a resolution condemning what it termed “selective targeting” of Kashmiris in the aftermath of the Delhi car blast involving a terror module that a Read More

‘We must launch a 360-degree attack on narcotics and organised crime’: Amit Shah

Addressing the 60th all-India DGP/IGP conference in Raipur, Chhattisgarh, Shah said the security forces and the police are delivering strong blows to extremism, radicalisation and narcotics NEW DELHI: Stating that the Narendra Modi Read More

Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem warns of possible new conflict after Israel kills senior commander

Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem on Friday warned that the group reserves the right to retaliate for Israel’s recent killing of its top military commander, signalling that a new conflict with Israel remains a possibility Go to Source Read More

Grounding for upgrade: Airbus A320 planes hit by software glitch globally; 350 of IndiGo & AI impacted in India

(Source: Airbus) NEW DELHI: Air travel will get majorly impacted in India and across the globe with the world’s largest selling single aisle — Airbus A320 family of planes — going to be grounded this weekend for a software upgrade. Read More

NMC Turns Down Vaishno Devi Medical College Bid To Allocate MBBS Seats To All-India Quota

New Delhi [India], November 28 (ANI): The National Medical Commission (NMC) has rejected a proposal from the Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Institute of Medical Excellence, Katra, seeking to place 100 per cent of its MBBS seats under the All India Quota (AI Read More

Related Articles