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California reconsidering its unfriendly autonomous trucking regs?

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Updated Jan 14, 2023

Despite being home to many companies involved in developing autonomous trucking technologies, heavy-duty trucks are currently prohibited from testing or deploying in California. 

California has permitted public testing of autonomous commercial vehicles trucks since 2019, but there is a 10,000 pound weight limit. That, however, may change. 

Just before 2022 closed, the California Department of Motor Vehicles announced a workshop on autonomous vehicles regulations, inviting the public to participate and provide ideas regarding the development of proposed regulations governing the operation of autonomous vehicles.

“I commend the California DMV for announcing a workshop on autonomous light-duty and heavy-duty trucks," said Jeff Farrah, executive director of the Autonomous Vehicle Industry Association (AVIA). "The Autonomous Vehicle Industry Association looks forward to participating to ensure Californians see the supply chain and safety benefits of AV trucks.”

AVIA was a signatory on a letter sent to to Governor Gavin Newsom in June, joined by more than 30 AV developers like Aurora, Embark, TuSimple, Plus, Uber Freight, Volvo Autonomous Solutions, Waymo, and trade organizations, noting that it it's been more than a decade since legislation enabling autonomous driving originally passed, "and over this period, there has been no movement for autonomous trucking regulation."

The workshop will be held Jan. 27 at 9 a.m. at California State University Harper Alumni Center.

The state's regulations currently have California mostly sitting on the sidelines as autonomous tech companies increasingly forge freight-hauling partnerships and clear safety hurdles on a path to commercial viability.