Volvo's driver-less cars 'confused' by kangaroos

By Chen Ziqi China Plus Published: 2017-06-28 17:12:31
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Speakers: Li Ningjing and Sam Duckett    

[Photo: From BBC News]

[Photo: From BBC News]

Volvo's self-driving technology is struggling to identify kangaroos in the road.

The Swedish car-maker's 2017 S90 and XC90 models use its Large Animal Detection system to monitor the road for deer, elk and caribou. But the way kangaroos move confuses it.

According to the Australia's National Roads and Motorists' Association, 80% of animal collisions in the country involve kangaroos.

More than 16,000 kangaroo strikes each year created millions of dollars of insurance claims.

Volvo's safety engineers began filming kangaroos' roadside behaviour in a nationally recognised hotspot for collisions in 2015.

And the data is being used to create a system of radar and cameras that can detect kangaroos and apply the brakes if a collision is imminent.

Volvo has an ambitious target that no-one is killed or seriously injured in a new Volvo by 2020.

The audio clip is from Studio+, produced by CRI. 

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