Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-KY) says that America is competing against China to innovate and develop autonomous vehicles during a House committee hearing.
Competing With China
During a House committee hearing by the House Energy and Commerce Committee on Tuesday, Guthrie shared that there was a clear "need" for a "national standard" when it comes to autonomous vehicles.
"We compete with them [China] in so many ways, AI and all the other things," Guthrie shared. He added that the U.S. wasn't competing with Europe "to regulate" but instead was "competing with China to innovate."
He also mentioned that self-driving cars were not just restricted to one state, but had nationwide applications, which meant that the decision was "clearly within our jurisdiction," Guthrie said.
U.S. House Committee hearing today:
"The Self Drive Act would provide one federal framework for automated vehicle companies to need to achieve before introducing automated vehicles onto the roadway; If this committee can come together to pass this bill, we will overcome China's… pic.twitter.com/krmWy6X0xa
The Guthrie-led committee had touted easing self-driving regulations ahead of the hearing on Tuesday, in line with Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy's plan to ease regulatory hurdles by proposing amendments to the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards (FMVSS).
Lawmakers under President Donald Trump have been pushing for affordability, with Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) also scheduled to hold a hearing with executives from top automakers in the U.S. to discuss the relevance of safety features like rear seat occupant alert and automatic emergency braking, which Cruz says drive up vehicle costs.
Meanwhile, Nvidia Corp(NASDAQ:NVDA) has also joined the self-driving race, unveiling its Alpamayo technology, which takes a Vision-Language-Action approach to self-driving and is touted by the chipmaker as an open-source "ChatGPT moment" for physical AI and autonomous driving.
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