newsworthy
22 DC VELOCITY AUGUST 2015 www.dcvelocity.com
Semiautomated truck caravans could be plying America’s
highways by 2020—and completely unmanned trucks
could join them by 2025—if technology continues to evolve
at current rates, according to a study by the consulting firm
Frost & Sullivan.
These driver-assisted—or eventually driverless—trucks
could help logistics and fleet management professionals
deliver loads with lower costs and improved safety, thanks
to faster reaction time for collision-avoidance situations,
the firm said.
However, planners face several challenges first, such as
installing sensors and networks into a “smart driving envi-
ronment” and developing reliable vehicle-to-vehicle and
vehicle-to-infrastructure communications, according to the
report, “The Future of Mobile Robots in Logistics.”
“All of this is possible because we are seeing a lot of
development in deploying intelligent traffic management
systems,” Archana Vidyasekar, the team lead for Frost &
Sullivan’s Visionary Innovation Research Group, said in
an early July webcast. “We’re seeing cities and urban areas
taking concrete steps toward creating some sort of essential
operating platform to control every aspect of the city, espe-
cially traffic and vehicles.”
The foundation for autonomous trucks is being laid in
warehouses as logistics companies find increasing appli-
cations for robots, she said. Current examples include
the automated guided vehicles (AGVs) seen following
preset magnetic tracks through many warehouses and the
bright-orange drive units made for Amazon.com Inc.’s
distribution centers by Kiva Systems, the company Amazon
acquired in 2012 and recently rebranded as Amazon
Robotics.
Most current autonomous truck applications operate
at the semiautomated grade, the first of three automation
levels, Vidyasekar said. This “level one” semiautomation
relies on familiar 21st century automotive technology such
as keyless entry, advanced driver assistance systems, and
electric power steering.
Highly automated “level-two” vehicles will add a suite of
capabilities, such as redundant computer backup to ensure
network connectivity, basic self-driving capability, and
adaptive cruise control that could slow down the vehicle
when its intersection assistance program detects merging
traffic lanes.
Several companies are experimenting with using level-two automation. These include the fleet of Google Inc.
cars navigating the streets of Mountain View, Calif., and the
“Freightliner Inspiration Truck,” a self-steering 18-wheel-
er prototype unveiled in May by Daimler Trucks North
America LLC. Caravans of these level-two trucks could be
cruising U.S. roads as soon as 2020, using vehicle-to-vehicle
communications and radar-based active braking systems to
follow one another very closely.
To ensure safe operation, the entire chain of trucks could
stop very quickly because they would all apply their brakes
automatically the instant the lead vehicle detected an obstacle—slowing down more quickly than human perception
and reaction time allow, Frost & Sullivan says.
The final step will be “level-three” automation, relying on
a fully autonomous vehicle that is capable of performing all
trucking functions without a human on board at
any point.
“For level three to work, we need not only the
vehicle technology but also the communication
networks to talk to each other, with a convergence of vehicle technologies like assisted driving
with vehicle-to-vehicle communication infrastructure,” Vidyasekar said in the webcast.
This full autonomy could be achieved in 10 to
15 years if current trends continue. Those trends
include the development of sophisticated vehicle
technologies, the communication infrastructure,
and wireless connectivity as well as the availability
of geographic information systems.
“If there is a clear path for these technologies to develop and for these driving assistance
systems to merge with these infrastructure systems, I think automated trucks and automated
fleet-management systems could very well be a
reality,” Vidyasekar said.
—B.A.
Unmanned trucks could cruise the highways by 2025, study says
CenterPoint Properties has opened a new 450,660-square-
foot speculative building within the CenterPoint Intermodal
Center–Kansas City. … Hanson Logistics
has added an additional 12,000 pallet positions of deep frozen storage, following
the completion of Phase IV of the Hanson
Logistics Chicago Consolidation Center. The
85,000-square-foot expansion brings the
facility’s overall capacity to 16. 5 million cubic feet, with 48,000
pallet positions and 50 dock doors. … Wow Logistics has broken
ground on a new Southern Idaho facility. The new space will
connect with the more than 350,000 square feet of dry ambient
warehousing space the company already operates in Jerome,
Idaho. … Rudolph Foods Co. Inc. has purchased a logistics center
in Beaumont, Calif., from commercial real estate firm Cushman
& Wakefield.
ground breakers
HANSON LOGISTICS