Tesla is recalling just over two million vehicles in the US fitted with its Autopilot advanced driver-assistance system to install new safeguards, after a safety regulator said the system posed safety concerns.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has been investigating the electric automaker led by billionaire Elon Musk for more than two years over whether Tesla vehicles adequately ensure that drivers pay attention when using Autopilot. The largest-ever Tesla recall appears to cover nearly all of its vehicles on US roads.
Tesla said in a recall filing Autopilot’s software system controls “may not be sufficient to prevent driver misuse” and could increase the risk of a crash.
Acting NHTSA administrator Ann Carlson told Reuters in August it’s “really important that driver monitoring systems take into account that humans over-trust technology”.
Tesla’s Autopilot is intended to enable cars to steer, accelerate and brake automatically within their lane, while enhanced Autopilot can assist in changing lanes on highways but does not make them autonomous.
One component of Autopilot is Autosteer, which maintains a set speed or following distance and works to keep a vehicle in its driving lane.
Tesla said it did not agree with NHTSA’s analysis but would deploy an over-the-air software update that will “incorporate additional controls and alerts to those already existing on affected vehicles to further encourage the driver to adhere to their continuous driving responsibility whenever Autosteer is engaged”.
The company did not respond to a question on whether the recall would be performed outside the US. It is not immediately clear if China will demand a recall over the same issue.
NHTSA opened a probe in August 2021 into Autopilot after identifying more than a dozen crashes in which Tesla vehicles hit stationary emergency vehicles and upgraded it in June 2022.
NHTSA said as a result of its investigation Tesla had issued the recall after the agency found “Tesla’s unique design of its Autopilot system can provide inadequate driver engagement and usage controls that can lead to foreseeable misuse of the system”. NHTSA reviewed 956 crashes where Autopilot was initially alleged to have been in use and focused on 322 Autopilot-involved crashes in its probe.
Bryant Walker Smith, a University of South Carolina law professor who studies transportation issues, said the software-only fix would be fairly limited. The recall “really seems to put so much responsibility on human drivers instead of a system that facilities such misuse”, Smith said.
Separately, since 2016, NHTSA has opened more than three dozen Tesla special crash investigations in cases where driver systems such as Autopilot were suspected of being used, with 23 crash deaths reported to date.
NHTSA said there might be an increased risk of a crash in situations when the system was engaged but the driver did not maintain responsibility for vehicle operation and was unprepared to intervene or failed to recognise when it was cancelled or not.
NHTSA’s investigation into Autopilot will remain open as it monitors the efficacy of Tesla’s remedies. Tesla and NHTSA held several meetings since mid-October to discuss the agency’s tentative conclusions on potential driver misuse and Tesla’s proposed software remedies in response.
The company would roll out the update to 2.03 million Model S, X, 3 and Y vehicles in the US dating back to the 2012 model year, the agency said.
The update based on vehicle hardware will include increasing prominence of visual alerts on the user interface, simplifying engagement and disengagement of Autosteer and additional checks upon engaging Autosteer “and eventual suspension from Autosteer use if the driver repeatedly fails to demonstrate continuous and sustained driving responsibility while the feature is engaged”, Tesla said.
It did not provide more specifics about exactly how alerts and safeguards would change.
Shares in the world’s most valuable automaker were down 1% in premarket trading.
Tesla in February recalled 362 000 US vehicles to update its FSD Beta software after NHTSA said the vehicles did not adequately adhere to traffic safety laws and could cause crashes.
NHTSA closed an earlier investigation into Autopilot in 2017 without taking any action. The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has criticised Tesla for a lack of system safeguards for Autopilot, and NHTSA for a failure to ensure the safety of Autopilot.
REUTERS