This Year, Autonomous Trucks Will Take to the Road With No One on Board

The startup TuSimple is deploying tractor-trailers that drive themselves from pickup to delivery

5 min read
Photo of a tractor trailer truck

First in Freight: In 2021, San Diego–based startup TuSimple plans to deploy autonomous trucks that drive themselves from pickup to delivery without anybody on board.

Photo: TuSimple

UPDATE 13 MARCH 2024: In 2021 when Spectrum published the original story here, below, there was abundant optimism about trucks hauling freight up and down U.S. highways without drivers behind their steering wheels. It seemed to make great business sense, once engineers said they had developed the technology that supposedly gave big rigs Level 4 autonomy. But long-haul truckers needn’t worry about being replaced by cameras, radars, and artificial intelligence. At least not anytime soon.

The rosy predictions made by companies like TuSimple and Alphabet’s Waymo turned out to be too good—or TuSimple—to be true.

By December 2023, TuSimple realized there was too much rough road ahead for its “Driver-out” self-driving truck system. It waved the white flag, indicating its intent to shut down its U.S. trucking concern after the loss of a partnership with truck manufacturer Navistar amid internal instability. TuSimple laid off most of its staff and pared down its operations to focus on the Chinese and Japanese freight markets.

Waymo, which had initially been just as bullish on driverless trucking on U.S. roads as TuSimple appeared to be, has halted its entire autonomous truck program. Last July, the Alphabet subsidiary announced that it was focusing its money and in-house self-driving-vehicle expertise on robotaxis for ride hailing.

Waymo, which had once hedged its bets by also staking out a position in logistics and delivery, decided to go full throttle in its quest to be the robotaxi market leader. Waymo might not give autonomous trucking a second thought now that its robotaxi service, Waymo One, gained approval to operate in Los Angeles and San Francisco this past week. Its driverless cars will now pick up passengers in those cities in addition to Phoenix, Ariz., and Austin, Texas.

Driverless trucks? Still no more than a definite maybe. —IEEE Spectrum

Original article from 4 January 2021 follows:

Companies like Tesla, Uber, Cruise, and Waymo promise a future where cars are essentially mobile robots that can take us anywhere with a few taps on a smartphone. But a new category of vehicles is about to overtake self-driving cars in that leap into the future. Autonomous trucks have been quietly making just as much, if not more, progress toward commercial deployment, and their impact on the transportation of goods will no doubt be profound.

Among nearly a dozen companies developing autonomous trucking, San Diego–based TuSimple is trying to get ahead by combining unique technology with a series of strategic partnerships. Working with truck manufacturer Navistar as well as shipping giant UPS, TuSimple is already conducting test operations in Arizona and Texas, including depot-to-depot autonomous runs. These are being run under what’s known as “supervised autonomy,” in which somebody rides in the cab and is ready to take the wheel if needed. Sometime in 2021, the startup plans to begin doing away with human supervision, letting the trucks drive themselves from pickup to delivery without anybody on board.

Both autonomous cars and autonomous trucks rely on similar underlying technology: Sensors—typically cameras, lidars, and radars—feed data to a computer, which in turn controls the vehicle using skills learned through a massive amount of training and simulation. In principle, developing an autonomous truck can be somewhat easier than developing an autonomous car. That’s because unlike passenger vehicles, trucks—in particular long-haul tractor-trailers—generally follow fixed routes and spend most of their time on highways that are more predictable and easier to navigate than surface streets. Trucks are also a better platform for autonomy, with their large size providing more power for computers and an improved field of view for sensors, which can be mounted higher off the ground.

TuSimple claims that its approach is unique because its equipment is purpose built from the ground up for trucks. “Most of the other companies in this space got the seeds of their ideas from the DARPA Grand and Urban Challenges for autonomous vehicles,” says Chuck Price, chief product officer at TuSimple. “But the dynamics and functional behaviors of trucks are very different.”

The biggest difference is that trucks need to be able to sense conditions farther in advance, to allow for their longer stopping distance. The 200-meter practical range of lidar that most autonomous cars use as their primary sensor is simply not good enough for a fully loaded truck traveling at 120 kilometers per hour. Instead, TuSimple relies on multiple HD cameras that are looking up to 1,000 meters ahead whenever possible. The system detects other vehicles and calculates their trajectories at that distance, which Price says is approximately twice as far out as professional truck drivers look while driving.

Price argues that this capability gives TuSimple’s system more time to make decisions about the safest and most efficient way to drive. Indeed, its trucks use their brakes less often than trucks operated by human drivers, leading to improvements in fuel economy of about 10 percent. Steadier driving, with less side-to-side movement in a lane, brings additional efficiency gains while also minimizing tire wear. Price adds that autonomous trucks could also help address a shortage of truck drivers, which is expected to grow at an alarming rate.

TuSimple uses a combination of lidar, radar, and HD cameras to detect vehicles and obstacles up to 1,000 meters away.Look Ahead: TuSimple uses a combination of lidar, radar, and HD cameras to detect vehicles and obstacles up to 1,000 meters away.Image: TuSimple

TuSimple’s fleet of 40 autonomous trucks has been hauling goods between freight depots in Phoenix, Tucson, Dallas, El Paso, Houston, and San Antonio. These routes are about 95 percent highway, but the trucks can also autonomously handle surface streets, bringing their cargo the entire distance, from depot driveway to depot driveway. Its vehicles join a growing fleet of robotic trucks from competitors such as Aurora, Embark, Locomation, Plus.ai, and even Waymo, the Alphabet spin-off that has long focused on self-driving cars.

“I think there’s a big wave coming in the logistics industry that’s not necessarily well appreciated,” says Tasha Keeney, an analyst at ARK Invest who specializes in autonomous technology. She explains that electrified autonomous trucks have the potential to reduce shipping expenses not only when compared with those of traditional trucking but also with those of rail, while offering the door-to-door service that rail cannot. “The relationships that TuSimple has made within the trucking industry are interesting—in the long term, vertically integrated, purpose-built vehicles will have a lot of advantages.”

By 2024,TuSimple plans to achieve Level 4 autonomy, meaning that its trucks will be able to operate without a human driver under limited conditions that may include time of day, weather, or premapped routes. At that point, TuSimple would start selling the trucks to fleet operators. Along the way, however, there are several other milestones the company must hit, beginning with its first “driver out” test in 2021, which Price describes as a critical real-world demonstration.

“This is no longer a science project,” he says. “It’s not research. It’s engineering. The driver-out demonstration is to prove to us, and to prove to the public, that it can be done.”

This article appears in the January 2021 print issue as “Robot Trucks Overtake Robot Cars.”

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