The Deputy Presiding Officer (Christine Grahame): Motion
debated, That the Parliament notes reports that automated
transport, including driverless cars, will be on the roads in the
UK in 2021 and will be commonplace in Scotland by 2030; considers
that this development will represent more than a simple transport
revolution, with significant and fundamental implications for
society, the economy,...Request free
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The Deputy Presiding
Officer (Christine Grahame):
Motion debated,
That the Parliament notes reports that
automated transport, including driverless cars, will be on
the roads in the UK in 2021 and will be commonplace in
Scotland by 2030; considers that this development will
represent more than a simple transport revolution, with
significant and fundamental implications for society, the
economy, jobs, transport policy, environment and energy
policy, space planning, safety and privacy, and notes the
belief that steps must be taken now to explore all of the
opportunities and challenges that these developments will
bring so that people in the Glasgow Provan constituency and
across Scotland can fully benefit from being at the
forefront of what it sees as the coming transformative
change.
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Ivan McKee (Glasgow
Provan) (SNP):
I am delighted to lead the debate. It is not often
that we get the opportunity to start with a largely blank
piece of paper and shape our future. We are all aware of
automation and understand that it is coming, perhaps faster
than we think, but although automation offers
opportunities, there are many threats, in particular to
existing jobs. In general terms, the challenges can seem
daunting and difficult to grasp. By focusing on one
technology, as we are doing this afternoon, we can explore
specific challenges and opportunities, and map out a path
forward, with detailed actions and milestones to make sure
that we take advantage of that new technology and it does
not take advantage of us. Let us be clear: this debate is
not about whether we think autonomous vehicles are a good
or a bad idea. If they are coming—and all the evidence says
that they are—our job is to find ways to mitigate their
downsides and exploit the opportunities that they present
for all of society.
Throughout history, disruptive transformations in
transport technology have driven significant economic
development, from the digging of the canal infrastructure
in the 1790s, the roll-out of the railways in the 1840s and
the rise of the automobile in the early 1900s, to the
expansion of commercial air travel from the 1950s. From the
1990s, the internet, transporting information rather than
people and goods, is the latest transport revolution to
drive economic growth. We are due another such disruptive
transformation and we need to be prepared.
Let us imagine for a moment what
the average personal transport experience of the near
future might look like. A person might own a car or have a
contract with a car lease or car share company, either as a
part share or as pay-as-you-go. A person who owns a car
might send it out to work to generate income for them.
People will use an app on their mobile
device to order up a vehicle as needed. The total number of
vehicles on the road will be much lower than it is today,
but each car will do a lot more miles, and the number of
vehicles available for hire will be 10 or 20 times what it
is today. In most areas, no one will have to wait more than
two or three minutes for a car to turn up at their door. In
fact, a person might order several vehicles—one to take
them to work, another for their spouse and a third to take
their children directly to school, meaning no more school
runs.
Without the need for driver interface, cars will look
nothing like they do today. They will be a comfortable
pod-type design, in which a person sits in the back, as
they would in a hackney cab or a limo, perhaps working or
relaxing. The vehicle will know what radio station or music
a person likes to listen to, and their email, or a
favourite film or television show, will be available on the
in-car terminal. Travel time will become hugely more
productive. Because the car is connected to all the other
vehicles on the road, it knows the fastest way to work and
how to avoid traffic. Traffic management systems, which at
the moment involve expensive infrastructure that is
designed to manage drivers’ erratic behaviour, are far
simpler.
Autonomous vehicles will not just affect our
relationship with man’s best friend—his or her car—but go
far beyond our personal transport experience. Ninety-seven
per cent of a car’s time is spent parked. Self-drive will
transform our cities, enabling higher housing density.
Garages and multistorey car parks can become spare rooms
and blocks of flats. Driveways and parking lots can become
gardens and parks. Lines of parked cars can be replaced by
cycle lanes. Ironically, self-drive will give us more space
and scope to promote active travel solutions.
On energy, our concerns about sufficient charging
points for electric vehicles and how to manage peak demand
will be much reduced. Self-drive vehicles will take
themselves to charging warehouses and top up their
batteries to help smooth demand and meet supply.
Infrastructure spend will be revolutionised. Interconnected
autonomous vehicles, without erratic drivers behind the
wheel, will use road space much more efficiently. The same
amount of traffic that currently clogs up our three-lane
highways will flow smoothly along a single
lane. We can see
that the advent of self-drive will
affect all sectors; indeed it is only a
matter of time until someone writes a country and western
song in which a guy’s truck leaves him, too.
In the area of inequalities, the impacts could be
significant and to our advantage if we grab the initiative
now rather than let others exploit the technology first.
People with disabilities, including sight loss, will be
able to access personal transport on the same basis as
everyone else. Those growing old and frail need not worry
about losing access to their vehicles. Without the cost of
the driver, the cost of private hire will come tumbling
down, providing affordable connectivity to those on low
incomes in peripheral housing schemes. Let us not forget
the more than 1 million road deaths annually, 94 per cent
of which are caused by driver error. We owe it to those to
move towards this vastly safer technology as soon as
possible.
Scotland was at the forefront of
the first two transport revolutions that I mentioned
earlier. Our canals enabled raw materials to move to
population centres and ports, and our railways enabled
movement of manufactured goods to market. The economic
boost from both those innovations generated wealth that, to
some extent and notwithstanding its unequal distribution,
we are still living off today.
The innovators behind the last
two transport revolutions came from these islands: Frank
Whittle invented the jet engine and Tim Berners-Lee
invented the internet. Sadly, we failed to take the lead in
exploiting those 20th century technologies as we had done
with other technologies in earlier centuries. We must not
miss the boat next time round.
I am glad that so many members
are taking part in the debate. Over the next 40 minutes or
so, I look forward to hearing members raise impacts and
opportunities that had not occurred to me.
I want to press the minister to
consider taking specific actions. My asks would be that
Government resource is applied to the technology not just
to maintain a watching brief on autonomous vehicle
developments elsewhere but to work with local government,
think tanks, the private sector and others in
Scotland.
The Government needs to identify
at-risk sectors and businesses and to work with them to
identify business transition plans supported by necessary
investments. It also needs to identify business
opportunities and careers of the future, and I set the
Government’s innovation unit a challenge to come up with a
list of 100 such new careers. Perhaps it could run a
competition to raise awareness and spark entrepreneurial
innovation.
The Government also needs to
quantify those impacts, introduce actions with a view to
putting Scotland in the driving seat—the self-driving
seat—on the technology, and understand how our tax and
social security systems would deal with that new world. At
some point—sooner, rather than later—a moonshot statement
setting out publicly a determination for Scotland to be the
first country in the world to create a 100 per cent
self-drive city would be very welcome.
Opportunities like this come
along every half century or so. They can utterly transform
our wealth and wellbeing, but only if we are proactive and
move quickly. Let us not miss the boat.
12:56 <br ><br >
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Kenneth Gibson
(Cunninghame North) (SNP):
First, I congratulate Ivan McKee
on securing the time to debate this fascinating topic. A
few short years ago, this debate would have been relegated
to sci-fi fan circles and online message boards; now,
driverless vehicles and the wider topic of artificial
intelligence are among the key issues that are being
discussed in our universities, in the private sector and in
our justice systems and political institutions.
Rapidly accelerating artificial
intelligence and robotics research is transforming our
world and our transport network is not immune to its
advance. It was even suggested at last year’s Scotland’s
Future Forum programme launch that, by 2030, driving will
be a pursuit of leisure alone and that all professional
drivers will be redundant. That undoubtedly raises
questions about the direct impact of the technology on
Scottish jobs, particularly the tens of thousands of people
in Scotland who are licensed heavy goods vehicle or taxi
drivers, or who transport people, goods and even takeaway
food.
Part of our preparation for the
driverless revolution must be to ensure that the profits
that are gained are not simply absorbed by car companies
and technology giants but channelled back into our economy
to drive investment and generate employment.
A driverless transport network
could be good news for those who find driving inaccessible:
the young, elderly, people with mobility issues or
disabilities that prevent them from driving, and a number
of MSPs who I understand do not have a driving
licence.
Communication between automated
cars could create a network that optimises traffic flow and
eases congestion, meaning that we will be free to perform
other tasks while travelling and get from A to B more
quickly. Safety may also improve once human error is
removed from the equation, even if many of us, including
me, may still have doubts about putting our lives in the
hands of a machine.
Automated vehicles will lead to
a revolution not only in our transport network, but in our
commercial and residential spaces, as Ivan McKee has
mentioned. Just as the arrival of cars created huge
demographic shifts and preceded the construction of
motorways to connect our cities and parking spaces to
facilitate commuter lifestyles, a fleet of driverless
vehicles could dramatically reshape urban planning.
A report by engineering
consultancy firm WSP suggested autonomous vehicles could
free up 15 to 20 per cent of the United Kingdom’s
developable land, throwing up boundless opportunities for
new homes, workplaces and green space. Given that, I am
surprised that the Greens are not here to participate in
the debate.
High-end cars are programmed
with more than 100 million lines of computer code, which
will increase exponentially with the arrival of driverless
cars. That leads to interesting and unexpected questions
about the practical and moral implications of the
technology. How, for example, are we to programme cars with
an understanding of moral philosophy? If an autonomous car
is on a crowded motorway and knows that it is about to
crash, how will it decide which other car to collide
with?
That is a modern imagining of
the old ethical puzzle known as the trolley problem whereby
a runaway trolley barrels down railway tracks. Ahead are
five people, who are tied up and unable to move, and the
trolley is headed straight for them. Another person is
standing some distance off, next to a lever; if they pull
the lever, the trolley will switch to a different set of
tracks, but there is someone else tied up on that side
track. The person at the lever has two options: either do
nothing, in which case the trolley kills the five people on
the main track; or pull the lever, diverting the trolley on
to the side track, where it will kill one. Which is the
ethical choice? Of course, there are many variables. For
example, who are the people who have been tied up? It is a
difficult choice, so how would a machine fare?
Most of us are either excited
about this new technology and the opportunities that it
presents or afraid of its consequences for our economy and
the fabric of society itself. However, with a proactive
approach, I believe that Scotland can help to shape the
development of automation. By investing in education and
encouraging technological innovation, we can strengthen our
talent base and guarantee that Scottish design and
excellence are at the forefront of technological advances.
We must also protect low-paid, low-skilled workers from
being swept aside by the inevitable influx of automated
labour.
What sets us mortals apart from
machines is our creativity, and our ability to design
innovative solutions to problems, weigh up risks and take a
leap of faith when we believe in our vision. Only by
harnessing what makes us unique and making the right
choices before the dawn of this technology can we lead the
way instead of being left behind. This debate will be
neither the beginning nor the end of the Scottish
Parliament’s discussion on the topic of automation, but
rather the start of a serious and long-term consideration
of the opportunities and challenges that it
presents.
13:01 <br ><br >
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Jamie Greene (West
Scotland) (Con):
I apologise in advance to the
chamber if my voice gives up halfway through this speech. I
think that this week’s events are taking a toll on my
larynx.
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The Deputy Presiding
Officer:
Where is when you need
him?
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Jamie Greene:
Indeed.
I am fascinated by the utopia
that Ivan McKee has painted. The idea that our cars will
talk to us and then take us where we want to go while we
sit in the back, listening to our favourite radio show—in
my case, “The Archers”—or catching up with our standard
responses and motion signing sounds wonderful. It would
free up so much of my time, given the hours of my life that
I spend on the M8.
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The Minister for
Transport and the Islands (Humza Yousaf):
Will the member give way?
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Jamie Greene:
The minister is welcome to tell me how wonderful the
trains are.
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Humza Yousaf:
Can I suggest public transport—the trains, for
example—as a solution to having to drive on the M8?
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Jamie Greene:
I commend the minister for his endeavours. However,
the problem is that, with the jobs that we have, we need,
like many other people, to get from A to B to C to D, and
that might not be easy with public transport. It is a
genuine concern, but the question of how we can get people
out of cars altogether is probably one for another
day.
It is not really true that this
is a thing of the future—it is actually a thing of today. I
have been in a Tesla car. If members have not done so, they
should try what I found to be a fascinating and wonderful
experience. These cars already have the technology and
engineering to drive themselves, but they do not have the
software, because legislation dictates that the cars cannot
self-drive. The fact is that these cars can, in many cases,
and in some countries, they do.
In this debate, though, we
should look not only at the positive aspects but at what
might be the consequences and implications of having more
driverless cars on the roads. The positive aspects include
the environmental benefits, which have already been
outlined. The fact that the majority of these cars will be
hybrid or electric is also positive, because it means that
they are safe and environmentally friendly. However,
although we should welcome these changes, we should also be
wary of the potential downsides of the technology.
Something that I noticed when I
lived in London for a period was the way in which many of
the terraced houses had had their gardens converted into
driveways, simply because there was not enough parking.
That led to a decline in London’s bee population, and the
idea that we could reverse those trends and get more green
space is great.
As for the economic and
industrial issues behind this, it is inevitable that
driverless cars and vehicles will lead to a decline in paid
driving jobs, which will have an effect. Of course, it will
be argued that the people in that workforce will adapt and
do other things with their time. However, before there were
cars, people travelled by horse and carriage, and the
introduction of cars did not lead to horses finding new
jobs. It probably led to a decline in horse employment.
Some might think that that would be a blessing—not least
the horses. It creates an interesting dilemma. What do we
do with people who currently drive for a living? So many
people in Scotland currently drive for a living, whether
they are taxi drivers, hauliers or delivery drivers.
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Ivan McKee:
I understand the member’s point about horses, but we
really should think about the people who looked after the
horses, of whom there were many hundreds of thousands in
those days, and who found new jobs servicing cars.
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Jamie Greene:
That is exactly my point. Those people had to
retrain. We should be thinking about what we have to train
the workforce today to be able to do tomorrow, when they
are no longer able to drive cars or no longer want to. What
are the new careers and opportunities? What infrastructure
are we putting in place to ensure that people have the
right skills?
We should also consider what
happens when or if it goes wrong. I hope that other members
will talk about that. What are the consequences for
liability and culpability? What are the consequences for
insurance and how we pay for that? What are the
consequences for our roads and how we invest in road
infrastructure? I hope that driverless cars are able to
avoid potholes—particularly the ones in North
Ayrshire.
13:05 <br ><br >
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David Stewart (Highlands
and Islands) (Lab):
I congratulate Ivan McKee on
securing today’s debate. I thank him for his interesting
and stimulating speech. I learned a lot from it. I
particularly liked his reference to the country and western
song. Could we call it “I lost my heart to a driverless
Ford Mustang”? Perhaps I should not give up the day
job.
For the past eight years I have
championed the cause of road safety, not only across the
Highlands and Islands, but across Scotland as a whole. As
members may know, I became involved in the issue back in
2010 when two teenagers were tragically killed in a
collision in Inverness. As part of that work, I set up the
north of Scotland driver awareness scheme, which involved
more than 25 road safety initiatives, such as the graduated
licence scheme. I am interested in anything that makes
roads safer, so I thank Ivan McKee for initiating the
debate and the members who have spoken so far for their
speeches.
Are autonomous vehicles and
driverless cars safe and are they a step in the right
direction? Although there is no doubt that fully autonomous
self-driving vehicles are on their way, there is concern
that many of us may confuse assisted driving technologies
with automated driverless vehicles. Assisted driving
technologies could include the use of cruise control,
lane-changing systems, automatic braking, collision
avoidance systems and so on. The key is that the systems
are designed to help the driver.
Where do I stand in the debate?
As cars are becoming more and more sophisticated and
drivers are more and more supported by driving technology,
it is only a matter of time before we see fully automated
cars. As Ivan McKee said, the facts speak for themselves:
90 per cent of road collisions are caused by driver
behaviour and driver error. That clearly shows that human
beings are not totally up to the job, but it is a big step
to go over to automated cars completely.
Many would argue that we need
better education and more driver assistance from
technology. In the debate so far, we have not looked at the
possibility of hackers breaking into the systems of an
automated car and making the car do things that it should
not. I believe that the industry is starting to look at
that issue, and voices on the pro-automated cars side of
the debate are pointing out that humans cause road
collisions, so surely it is safer to rely on
technology.
However, is it safer to hand
over total control of a vehicle? To determine whether
automated vehicles are safer than humans, researchers will
need to establish a non-collision rate for both human
drivers and the emerging driverless vehicles. I am all for
any action that improves road safety. I am excited by the
possibility of our streets eventually seeing fully
automated vehicles that have passed stringent testing.
However, for now, driver-assisted systems are with us for
years to come, and those improved systems are very
good.
For example, Volvo cars can
detect a possible collision—be that with another vehicle or
a pedestrian—and make the car brake and stop. We have cars
that can alert us when we move out of a lane, and we have
intelligent braking systems and cruise control. Those are
all positive additions to making our roads safer for
all.
In reality, the time for a
person jumping into the rear seat of a vehicle and reading
a newspaper while the vehicle drives off on its own is a
long way off. There is much work on safety still to do.
However, with our improved and increased high-tech support
systems, we are moving in that direction. We will see
automated vehicles on our roads in the not-too-distant
future.
It is my belief that, to begin
with, automated vehicles will form a system of automation
that is similar to a tram system, in that they will be
separated from other road vehicles and run along a set
route between two points. The transport minister is in
front of me, so I make a plea for an automated vehicle
pilot between Inverness city and Inverness
airport.
The chief executive of Tesla
said:
“Where it gets tricky is that urban
environment around 30 or 40 miles an hour. Right now it’s
fairly easy to deal with things that are below 5 to 10
miles per hour, because we can do that with the
ultrasonics—we just make sure it doesn’t hit
anything”.
Things get more complicated at
higher speeds.
In the immediate future, we will
all benefit from partial autonomous technology such as
lane-changing systems. Fully autonomous technology is still
a distance away. It needs isolation, and testing in
specially designed so-called cities, such as the one
developed by the University of Michigan. As President John
F Kennedy said,
“Change is the law of life. And those
who look only to the past or the present are certain to
miss the future.”
13:10 <br ><br >
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Ash Denham (Edinburgh
Eastern) (SNP):
I, too, congratulate Ivan McKee on securing this very
interesting debate. The recent development of autonomous
vehicles represents something of a transport revolution,
and not just for those of us who had to take their driving
test four times. Ivan is right to acknowledge that now is
the time to consider the impact that autonomous vehicles
will have on our society. Other members have drawn
attention to the benefits that such vehicles offer,
including reduced carbon emissions, less congestion and
fewer road accidents, but there could be negative
consequences, and a couple of members made note of those.
Such improvements in technology can and probably will have
an impact on jobs, so we need to ensure that the benefits
of those improvements are spread across many different
providers and that they accrue to society, rather than
being concentrated in the hands of only a few companies. We
will need to take account of those issues as we look
towards the future and the many possible advantages.
When I looked at the subject,
what stood out for me is the way in which autonomous and
self-driving cars will allow us to radically transform the
cities in which we live. For members who represent a city,
as I do, that is a very exciting potential opportunity.
Although automated vehicles will rewrite the rules of
transport, they will also offer us the opportunity to
reclaim the environment that surrounds us and shape our
cities for tomorrow. Cities today are often dominated by
cars, overbearing traffic, congestion and expansive
multistorey car parks. The future of autonomous vehicles
reimagines private car ownership—vehicle pods, as Ivan
mentioned, capable of carrying several people at once, and
less a personal car than a robotaxi. Summoned by phone,
transport in future would centre around those shared
journeys. By 2035, it is predicted that 80 per cent of
people will use robotaxis and that urban car ownership will
have fallen by 70 per cent. Much of the meaningful impact
of alternative vehicles therefore relies on promoting their
shared-use aspect, which would reduce the number of cars on
the roads. That has to be a good thing.
What does that mean for our cities? It means an
opportunity to reclaim the space that is currently used for
traffic lanes, car parks and on-road parking. That would be
a huge benefit in my constituency, Edinburgh Eastern.
Cities that use only autonomous vehicles would need 90 per
cent less space for parking, and by reclaiming almost all
the 15 to 30 per cent of space that is used for car parks
in cities, we open up possibilities for innovative
development in urban areas. No longer would we need to
choose between necessary housing and community spaces. We
could offer not only creative housing but sports
facilities, art projects, public squares and spaces. In
doing so, we can create cities and public areas that
prioritise the people who live in them, not their
cars.
We can create city spaces and centres that are
characterised by extended pedestrian areas, designated
cycle lanes and green parks. In Brooklyn, in New York, the
introduction of protected cycle lanes led to three times
the number of cyclists and reduced injuries to road users
caused by speeding and crashes by 60 per cent. In
Copenhagen, four times as many people now cycle as drive.
By encouraging those alternative uses for car space, we
will be able to create healthier, greener towns and cities.
For me, what is of particular interest is the prospect of
future technological advances being used in that way to
regenerate our communities and improve quality of life for
all of us.
13:14 <br ><br >
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Jamie Halcro Johnston
(Highlands and Islands) (Con):
I congratulate Ivan McKee on
securing today’s debate, which has verged between something
from “Tomorrow’s World” and “The Jetsons”. It is quite
clear that driverless cars will be an important development
for the future.
There has been a deal of
discussion on connected and autonomous vehicles—or CAVs—in
recent years. A number of systems with varying levels of
automation have already been demonstrated. I welcome the
action that has been taken by the United Kingdom Government
in investigating the future benefits of such vehicles and
in equipping the UK for the regulatory change that the
introduction of such vehicles might involve. The Department
for Transport obviously has a key role, but many of the
future benefits have been championed by the Department for
Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy. As the
department’s secretary of state, , has highlighted, the UK
industrial strategy will be a key driver—excuse the pun—of
innovation in such new technology around our country, and
it was welcome that it featured in the industrial strategy
white paper. has set out a key ambition
of making the UK the best place in the world in which to
develop CAV technology.
As has been mentioned, some
elements of the innovations are already emerging as
assistive technologies in today’s vehicles—advanced road
braking and lane-changing assistance spring to mind. In
that role, they prevent accidents and lower the harm that
can come from accidents. We have a proud record in that
respect, as Britain’s roads are among the safest in the
world. Much has changed over the decades since car
ownership became commonplace. There will be much on our
roads that will change in the future, and Ivan McKee is
right that we should plan early to make changes for new
technology.
There are clearly many such
areas in which the Scottish and UK Governments can work
together in making progress on preparing for the future and
in sharing information to ensure that regulatory frameworks
are in place to enable development and progress. Therefore,
I welcomed the answer that the minister, Humza Yousaf, gave
to my colleague Jamie Greene in 2016 in which he indicated
that Transport Scotland was already working closely with
the Department for Transport and the centre for connected
and autonomous vehicles.
From the perspective of my
Highlands and Islands region, there is enormous potential.
In rural areas, driverless cars would be a positive
development, helping to connect remote communities,
lowering costs and making travel easier. The economic and
social benefits could be significant and touch all parts of
our local economy. The House of Lords Science and
Technology Committee cautioned that there was too great a
political focus on driverless cars, when the benefits of
autonomous vehicles were most likely to appear first in
sectors such as the marine and agriculture sectors. I am
aware that those sectors have been considered by colleagues
around the chamber, but it is worth emphasising their
importance in a region such as mine. We have a significant
reliance on agriculture in particular, and new technology
can have a major impact on efficiency.
It would be shortsighted to
overlook the fact that significant barriers remain at this
stage to the mass roll-out of driverless vehicles. As a
result, I caution against too many glances into crystal
balls today. The technology aspect is only one
consideration among many. How our society and market forces
respond to such vehicles will be interesting. Emergent
technology is often accompanied by concerns, and there is
little that is more unnerving than passing one’s safety
entirely into the hands of an automated system. Surveys
have shown a reluctance among many people, especially the
older generation, to move towards such a loss of control on
the roads.
The gains might be different
from what we expect. It has been observed that a number of
the benefits of automated vehicles will become apparent
only when a critical mass of vehicles are automated—or,
indeed, when all vehicles are automated. We can envisage
far more precise and efficient movement on our roads, but
those vehicles will, at least initially, still have to cope
with human error and behaviour.
For some years now, there has
been a move away from road transport, yet increases in road
travel might again be a feature of our future transport
planning. How our roads, town centres and businesses adapt
to that will need an early response from the Scottish
Government.
13:18 <br ><br >
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Tom Arthur (Renfrewshire
South) (SNP):
I congratulate Ivan McKee on securing the debate. I
welcome the tone that he took, which was very positive and
energetic. Sometimes it is easy in Parliament and, I
imagine, in the Government to deal with day-to-day business
by becoming managerial, but we have to set a vision and an
agenda for the future.
Although I recognise the comments that Jamie Halcro
Johnston made about the issue sitting somewhere
between “Tomorrow’s
World” and “The Jetsons”, Ivan McKee’s motion makes
reference to 2030, which is only 12 years hence. Members
should think back 12 years ago to how many of us were using
Twitter, Facebook and other social media platforms.
Further, we could not have predicted the disruptive impact
that Netflix would have not just on how we consume digital
content but on how it is generated.
The issue of automation that we
are talking about today is the way in which vehicles would
be piloted by computers as opposed to people. However,
automation has been with the automobile industry for a long
time and automation of the manufacturing of automobiles is
a significant part of that. I can relate to that. My
constituency is home to Linwood, which is synonymous with a
car plant being closed down because it was deemed to be
economically inefficient and with the huge unemployment and
other issues that followed from that. The concerns about
disruption and the impact on existing jobs are serious and
we must consider them carefully. It is important that we do
not react to them in an alarmist fashion, but we must take
cognisance of them. Ivan McKee made important suggestions
about horizon scanning to ensure that we prepare and
consider opportunities to reskill and retrain.
I will touch on some of the
wider economic opportunities that the revolution will
provide. It will necessitate the use of existing
technologies, adaptations to existing technologies and,
potentially, the development of new technologies.
One such example is the light
detection and ranging—LIDAR—sensors that are essential to
the way in which many driverless cars work. They are rather
like a much more efficient and faster version of sonar in
that they use light pulses to map surroundings. However,
lately, there has been such demand for LIDAR sensors that
producers of the devices have struggled to keep up and
there have been six-month delays. The result of that is
that a lot of start-ups could disrupt that market by moving
to more solid-state technologies.
Scotland, of course, has had a
strong sector for lasers and sensors. I am keen to consider
ways in which our economy can benefit from the
manufacturing of such devices. As the First Minister
stated, we need not only to be consumers of the products of
the future but to actively develop and engage with
them.
There are economic
opportunities, but there are also the economic threats that
have been mentioned already, such as those posed to the
haulage industry, public transport drivers such as bus
drivers, taxi drivers and delivery drivers. We must
consider how those threats interact with the gig economy.
That speaks to broader issues about how we design our
social security and taxation systems.
-
Jamie Greene:
The member makes some interesting points about the
types of things for which we use cars. Does he accept that
there is a move to use not necessarily driverless vehicles
but drones to do those things and that that market could
replace some of the driving?
-
Tom Arthur:
Absolutely. That is an excellent point. Amazon is
already pioneering that approach. We cannot consider the
matter in isolation.
Ivan made a very interesting
point about the flipside. We consider the gig economy as,
ultimately, a threat, but he put forward the idea of people
considering their driverless vehicles as assets to be
monetised by letting them out. That raises issues about the
regulation of that market.
As other colleagues said, it is
important that we ensure that the benefits that come from
driverless vehicles and increased automation are enjoyed by
all, not simply the companies that are at the cutting edge
at the moment. All society should benefit from the change,
and that includes the wider social benefits.
-
The Deputy Presiding
Officer:
Due to the number of members remaining who wish to
speak in the debate, I am minded to accept a motion without
notice under rule 8.14.3 of the standing orders to extend
the debate by up to 30 minutes.
Motion moved,
That, under Rule 8.14.3, the debate be
extended by up to 30 minutes.—[Ivan
McKee]
Motion agreed to.
13:23 <br ><br >
-
Alex Rowley (Mid
Scotland and Fife) (Lab):
When I first read Ivan McKee’s
motion, I was struck by the number of areas listed as
likely to be impacted by the new technology of driverless
cars as it moves from the pages of science fiction straight
into being part of our daily lives.
On Tuesday, I saw on the BBC
that the self-flying air taxi has been unveiled in New
Zealand. It is abundantly clear that the future envisaged
by writers and film-makers is fast becoming a reality. It
is the responsibility of Governments around the world to
recognise the impacts—good and bad—that that future holds.
Such innovation and the pace of change currently attract a
large amount of media attention as well as public debate
but the implications of the technology go far beyond
changing the way in which we move goods and people locally
or around the world. As has always been the case when the
world has witnessed massive technological change, there
will be a wide-ranging impact as societies and economies
around the globe learn to respond and adapt.
It is difficult to imagine all
the potential consequences. However, we must anticipate the
change that is coming and learn how best to work with it.
Crucially, as the motion states, we must make sure that the
benefits of the changing technology are available to all.
By understanding the direction of change, we can anticipate
any negative consequences, try to mitigate them and, at the
same time, work with the positive consequences to deliver
the best outcome for society as a whole.
There are benefits for
individuals. Will Hutton, chair of the Big Innovation
Centre and principal of Hertford College at the University
of Oxford, has optimistically pointed out that
“Roads will be able to carry more
traffic”
and be safer and
“your car will deliver you to your home
or place of work and then park itself without you. Road
accidents will plummet. Energy efficiency will be
transformed. Insurance rates ... even the need for
insurance”
will plunge. However, Mr Hutton
also highlights the risks. All sorts of jobs involving
maintaining conventional cars will disappear. The cars
themselves will be made by robots in automated car
factories. The new jobs will be in the design and marketing
of the cars, and in writing the computer software that will
allow them to navigate their journeys, along with the apps
for our mobile phones that will help us to use them
better.
Automation is a very real
concern, and possibly one of the biggest issues facing us
as a society as we move forward through the 21st century.
As has always been the case, workers can suffer as a result
of technological advancements. At the dawn of the
industrial revolution, workers’ rights were virtually
non-existent. It was through the hard work of trade unions
and the labour movement that safer, better working
conditions were won.
The world that we live in today
owes a great deal to those who fought for it from within
our movement. As we move forward, we must work to ensure
that technological advancements are to the benefit of all
and that workers are not left on the sidelines. We know in
which direction technology is moving, so we must plan
accordingly. That means developing a skilled workforce now,
from an early age, able to work in the world of
tomorrow.
13:27 <br ><br >
-
Emma Harper (South
Scotland) (SNP):
I add my congratulations to Ivan
McKee on securing the debate. As an MSP for the rural South
Scotland region, I spend a lot of time in my car on the
A75, A76, A77 and other roads, driving to visit farms and
rural businesses. I know that the minister has those roads
on his radar already.
I welcome Ivan McKee’s
description of the potential for my journeys to be more
productive with the assistance of technology, perhaps
making my journey about more than just driving from A to B.
Although the technological developments behind the
driverless-car revolution are fascinating, the implications
for our society are perhaps even more interesting.
First, it might seem
counterintuitive, but some of the studies show that
driverless cars are actually safer. Some people might think
that that would not be the case, but they might result in
fewer people being killed in road accidents every year. Our
streets might be clearer, too, and many experts predict
that car ownership will become a rare phenomenon. Instead,
people will hire cars, or transport may be delivered as a
service by companies that own fleets of self-driving or
driverless vehicles.
Because the cars will be
electric, they will help us to cut carbon emissions
dramatically. As a former member of the Environment,
Climate Change and Land Reform Committee I would welcome
the reduction in carbon emissions.
As a registered nurse, I am
interested in how driverless cars can be revolutionary for
healthcare. Experts predict that health-related sensors
installed in vehicles could detect various medical and
health-related conditions. As soon as the passenger enters
the vehicle, the sensors can pick up their vital signs, for
instance.
When an emergency medical
situation develops, ambulance response times could be
dramatically improved. In addition, ambulances, like any
vehicle on the road, face obstacles, including drivers who
do not obey the law when they see or hear an emergency
vehicle coming. Self-driving automated vehicles that are
controlled by an integrated system might open a path to
allow an ambulance through.
-
Jamie Greene:
I apologise; I seem to be intervening a lot, but it
is a fascinating subject with lots of areas that we could
probe. I have always been fascinated that cars do not
contain automatic breathalysers that make it impossible to
drive or even start a car if they detect alcohol on the
driver’s breath. Does the member have views on that?
-
Emma Harper:
A driverless car would not need a breathalyser in it.
I am not sure that I understand the intervention. Cars are
available that require people to blow into breathalysers
before the ignition can be turned on, but we are talking
about driverless cars, which I imagine would not need such
technology.
I want to bring the debate back to driverless
cars. I was talking
about automatic vehicles that are controlled by an
integrated system. We want to ensure that, in emergency
situations, people can focus on support and
healthcare.
I give another example. A person
who needed dialysis could be picked up from their home on
Monday, Wednesday and Friday and transported to hospital
for their dialysis appointment. The health aspects of the
technology could be good, in helping elderly drivers to get
outside and engage. For example, a driverless vehicle could
support a person with dementia to continue to go about
their daily routine. As we age, our ability to react
quickly can deteriorate, which can have an enormous impact
on people’s lives. A study in America showed that people
who had had their driving licences taken away from them
were more likely to experience depression. Driverless cars
might support better care for people by enabling them to
continue to access open spaces.
The legislative and regulatory
frameworks on autonomous vehicles are reserved to the UK
Government, but I am pleased that the minister has
indicated support for and encouragement of research,
development and testing. This is an exciting time, and I
would love the Scottish Government to engage proactively on
the issue. I welcome Ivan McKee’s motion.
13:32 <br ><br >
-
Finlay Carson (Galloway
and West Dumfries) (Con):
I thank Ivan for bringing this debate to the
chamber—
-
The Deputy Presiding
Officer:
May I just stop you there? I have been letting this
slip through, but we need full names in the chamber. I know
that today’s debate is quite chummy, but I do not want it
to be as chummy as that.
-
Finlay Carson:
I thank Ivan McKee, and I am pleased that there was a
parking space left to enable me to contribute on an
important subject. The only problem is that four or five
minutes is nothing like enough time for me to talk about
all the exciting possibilities. I think that driverless
cars absolutely are the future and are just round the next
bend in the road. Indeed, I think that we are accelerating
in that direction.
As Jamie Halcro Johnston and
other members said, the issue is not just the technology
but the legal and social aspects of driverless cars.
I want to concentrate on where
we are now. Many bog-standard family cars are already
controlled to a great extent by technology that almost
enables the car to drive itself. We have satnav that
provides pinpoint accuracy about where the car is placed on
the road. We have lane-sensing radar, as we heard, which
can adjust the steering wheel with minimal input from the
driver. We have cruise control that speeds up or slows down
the car with no manual intervention. No doubt anyone who
has cruise control will have relied on the maximum speed
option to ensure that they have not exceeded the 30mph
limit, or that they have complied with the limit in an
average speed zone.
Cars can park
themselves—although in Edinburgh it might be more useful to
have cars that can find parking spaces; I think that that
technology is not far away. Automatic collision avoidance,
which means that a car never collides with anything, is
present in a lot of top-of-the-range models. We have the
technologies; all we need to do is join them up to get
fully autonomous cars.
As my party’s spokesman for the
digital economy, I can see that this technology has
extremely wide-reaching benefits for all our communities,
rural and urban. Car technology is constantly evolving, as
is how we use data and big data. In the very near future,
if it is not already happening in some of our cities, the
data for our journeys will be stored anonymously and used
in computer modelling systems to control air quality and
cut congestion in our urban areas.
Furthermore, if we are looking
to cut the number of vehicles on our roads, this is a
perfect opportunity to consider driverless HGVs travelling
in automated convoys, braking and accelerating together,
and controlled by a driver in a lead vehicle. It would be a
fantastic way to cut congestion and emissions. HGVs could
use roads during the night and in the early morning rather
than clogging up major routes at peak times. There are
issues about lorry convoys, but they are not
insurmountable, and as more vehicles become autonomous,
computers will be able to manage traffic to minimise travel
times and reduce delays.
For people who live in rural
areas, having access to a car is pretty much a
prerequisite, particularly because there are poor, or
non-existent, public transport links in some rural
communities. Automated cars could revolutionise rural life
and take away the social isolation that we currently
see.
It is not just our rural areas
that will benefit. Our major cities, Edinburgh and Glasgow,
could save up to £45 million a year by reducing the amount
of road crashes, according to a report by engineering
company Parsons Brinckerhoff. We cannot put a price on
saving a life, but a saving of £45 million a year and a
reduction in the number of accidents sounds like not too
bad a place to start.
The Chancellor of the Exchequer,
, said in last year’s
budget that he wants to see driverless cars on our roads by
2021. That might seem to be ambitious, but as members will
know from what I have already said, I do not think that it
is. Rolling out driverless cars could be one of the most
ambitious things that Scotland has ever done. With Scotland
known around the world for being a nation of innovators,
this could be another feather in our cap—we could lead the
driverless car revolution. A number of car manufacturing
companies were based in my constituency, in Galloway, but
unfortunately they are long gone. We might see them coming
back.
I share Ivan McKee’s ambitions.
Plans are progressing at a rapid rate, so it is important
that we are having the debate to explore all the ways in
which Scotland could benefit from such transformational
change.
13:37 <br ><br >
-
The Minister for
Transport and the Islands (Humza Yousaf):
I join others in thanking Ivan McKee for bringing the
motion to the chamber for debate. It has been an incredibly
interesting, insightful and energetic debate by all who
have spoken. There is a lot of food for thought for all of
us, but I want to give reassurance that some of the work is
happening at governmental level—we are doing it in the
Scottish Government and we are working very closely with
the UK Government on the matter. I will touch on that in a
second.
I have meetings with a number of
transport stakeholders. Ivan McKee was absolutely right to
say that irrespective of whether people are in favour of or
opposed to the idea of connected and autonomous vehicles,
those vehicles are coming, and everybody understands that
they are coming. However, there are still some doubters, so
I will touch on some of the potential challenges that exist
in respect of autonomous automated vehicles in order,
perhaps, to dispel some misconceptions and reassure people
in relation to some of their doubts. For people who do not
believe that autonomous cars will be advantageous, one of
the strongest arguments for them was made by Ivan McKee,
when he said that they could banish the school run. I think
that we would all agree that that would not be a bad
thing.
On the opportunities that will
be created by connected and automated vehicles, there will
be fewer crashes on our roads. A number of statistics have
been produced, ranging from human error being a factor in
85 per cent of all reported vehicular incidents through to
its being a factor in 95 per cent of such incidents.
Whatever statistic we use, we can agree that the vast
majority of road accidents are down to human error. As
Finlay Carson rightly said, we cannot put a price on a life
being saved, but autonomous cars could certainly be a huge
advantage.
There is also the opportunity of
freedom to travel for people who currently find it
difficult to do so; Finlay Carson and Emma Harper mentioned
that in the context of rural areas in particular, as did a
couple of other members. There is also an advantage when we
think about people who have mobility problems.
We could also have more
efficient road networks that would be safer, smoother and
swifter. A good example is HGV platooning, which Finlay
Carson mentioned. Avoiding stop-start congestion would
reduce the environmental impact of driving.
Many members have spoken about
whether driverless cars would have a negative or positive
effect on jobs. I will come on to talk about some of the
stats, but I consider that the advantages from driverless
cars would include the creation of new jobs and technology,
with the automotive sector building on Scotland’s strong
reputation for innovation and scientific excellence.
We are absolutely right to
always be ambitious for Scotland. However, the
transformation is in its infancy. It is likely that the
initial cost of products would be prohibitive for the
majority of people. Markets will adapt, but how quickly
they will do so remains to be seen. I am sceptical about
some of the timeframes, but as many members have said, it
is better that Scotland is in the automated driving seat—or
whatever pun we want to use—and ahead of the curve, as
opposed to lagging behind. As the First Minister set out in
our programme for government, she wants people in Scotland
to be the innovators and the producers of the technology,
not just the consumers of it.
Many members have asked about
the jobs that could come as a result of this
transformational transport revolution. According to
research that was commissioned by the Society of Motor
Manufacturers and Traders, connected and autonomous
vehicles could bring wide economic benefits, including an
estimated £51 billion a year and more than 320,000 jobs by
2030. Again, we might want to take those figures with a
little pinch of salt, but even if half those benefits are
realised, we would be talking about billions of pounds
coming into the UK economy and hundreds of thousands of
jobs being created.
The Government is very much open
for business for trials of connected and autonomous
vehicles, and we are keen to explore that with the UK
Government. We are in discussion with the centre for
connected and autonomous vehicles, Scottish Enterprise and
many others, about how we can facilitate trials,
demonstration projects and pilots in Scotland. A number of
members have suggested where in their constituencies or
regions those trials could take place, and they should
continue to pass those ideas to us.
Ivan McKee laid down a couple of
challenges for the Government in relation to driverless
cars. Although we are doing a fair bit of work,
particularly with stakeholders, I am committed to holding a
connected and autonomous vehicle demonstration summit in
2018, which will showcase international developments and
explore with the transport industry how Scotland can best
position itself to realise the benefits. At the summit, we
will be seeking the opportunity to support a trial, which
will potentially be with the freight and logistics sectors.
I will ensure that every member who has spoken in the
debate is given information about the summit. If members
are able to attend the summit, we will be delighted to have
them.
-
Jamie Greene:
Will the minister take an
intervention?
-
Humza Yousaf:
-
The Deputy Presiding
Officer:
This issue is obviously of great interest to you, Mr
Greene.
-
Jamie Greene:
I hope that it is of interest to
everyone.
The SNP Government has just
presided over the building of substantial infrastructure
improvements to the M8, M74 and M73. Are those motorways
capable of accommodating driverless vehicles such as the
ones to which Finlay Carson referred? What planning for
driverless vehicles was undertaken when the infrastructure
improvements were being designed and built?
-
Humza Yousaf:
There is, if I am honest, a way to go in achieving
that. As was mentioned in the programme for government and
the First Minister’s statement, we are making the A9, which
we are dualling, the first electric
highway. Perhaps,
when we consider future infrastructure projects, we should
be looking to create the first autonomous highway.
There is more work to be done.
We are introducing intelligent transport systems—we have
one across the Forth, and we are trying to see where else
we can roll out such systems. Although accommodating
driverless vehicles has not been part of the initial design
of infrastructure projects, that is not to say that that
cannot be bolted on afterwards. As I said, we have a way to
go; Jamie Greene has raised a good point.
As time is very short, I want to
reassure members about the legal framework. We are having
conversations about that. Transport Scotland is working the
Scottish Law Commission, which is progressing a joint
three-year review, alongside the Law Commission of England
and Wales, of driving laws and preparation of self-driving
vehicles. It aims to deliver by 2021 a modern and robust
package of reforms promoting automated vehicles and their
use as part of public transport networks and on-demand
passenger services. The two law commissions will work
closely with the centre for connected and autonomous
vehicles in developing the policy proposals. As I said, we
are very much part of that work.
I again thank Ivan McKee for
securing the debate. I will ensure that members are given
an invitation to the summit that will take place later this
year. Every member has reiterated that Scotland is well
placed to take advantage of this technological revolution.
I hope that we just get on with it.
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