Trucking news and briefs for Monday, Aug. 23, 2021:
Self-driving truck company Aurora has released its initial version of the Aurora Safety Case Framework, which applies to both autonomous trucks and passenger vehicles.
The safety case-based approach is a defined way to evaluate when the company’s vehicles are safe enough to operate on public roads and to assess that they are not creating an unreasonable risk to motor vehicle safety.
“A Safety Case Framework is the most effective and efficient path to safely pulling the safety driver, and it’s an imperative component for any company looking to operate without a safety driver and safely deliver commercial-ready self-driving vehicles at scale,” said Aurora CEO and co-founder Chris Urmson. “It’s something other self-driving companies should strongly consider using as they move towards commercialization.”
Aurora’s Safety Case Framework captures different elements that are critical for evaluating the safe development, testing and operation of a self-driving vehicle on public roads. While a safety case-based approach is frequently used in a variety of other safety-centric industries — including aviation, nuclear, medical, automotive, and oil and gas exploration and extraction — it is not yet the norm in the self-driving industry.
Within Aurora, the framework is how the company continuously reviews evidence and evaluates the Aurora Driver’s performance and development against internal standards to ensure it is confident putting self-driving vehicles on the road both with and without a vehicle operator. Externally, it enables the company to effectively share its approach and progress with partners, customers, regulators and the general public.
Marathon Petroleum Corp. and soybean produced ADM agreed to form a joint venture for the production of soybean oil to supply growing demand for renewable diesel fuel.