GM’s plan to deploy self-driving Cruise Origin on hold as feds weigh exemption request

General Motors’ mission to get 5,000 self-driving Cruise Origin vehicles in cities nationwide hangs on whether federal regulators will grant the automaker’s request to exempt the vehicle from federal safety standards.

GM plans to start building the Origin at Factory Zero in Detroit/Hamtramck this year but needs approval from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to put the vehicles on the roads. The Origin is a small bus-like vehicle that will transport up to six people without a driver. It operates through autonomous technology and has no manual steering controls or pedals.

This is how the inside of a Cruise Origin will look if they are permitted to go into production and service on U.S. roads. GM and Cruise have petitioned NHTSA for exemption from federal safety standards so GM can start building the Origin at Factory Zero in Detroit/Hamtramck.

“The Cruise Origin is on track to start production this year,” said Aimee Ridella, GM spokeswoman. But she is careful to note, “pending government approval.”

That government approval depends on how satisfactorily GM answers some big questions NHTSA is asking about the operational safety of the self-driving cars Cruise already has on roads now. In some cases, those cars have caused traffic backups and other public safety disruptions.

A regulatory framework is needed first

NHTSA regulates safety guideline standards to reduce auto crashes for regular motor vehicles but regulating autonomous vehicles is new for the organization. NHTSA’s approval process for vehicles that do not have a human driver, such as the Cruise Origin, is required because current federal safety standards are written for cars that have a steering wheel and pedals. A delay in approval could delay GM putting Origins on the road and making money off them.

A self-driving Cruise Origin which GM and Cruise are awaiting NHTSA's approval to mass produce.

But no framework exists to guide NHTSA at the moment even though lawmakers such as U.S. Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-Ann Arbor) is pushing to get one in place so that companies such as Cruise can continue to make technological advancements that ensure safety, yet keep the U.S. competitive with other countries. China, for example, has made big investments in autonomous technology.

“There’s a lot of confusion and uncertainty that’s arisen out of this vacuum of employing self-driving vehicles nationwide and that’s why it’s important to set a framework for the rules of the road for autonomous vehicles,” Dingell said.

Dingell wants to help get legislation in place that provides a framework to regulate autonomous vehicles because, she said, “I want these things built at Factory Zero because it means 2,000 union jobs. But we have to update the laws. Right now, current motor vehicle safety regulations require there be a driving wheel, accelerator and a brake, among other things. So what does the AV need? We need to update the motor vehicle standards.”