Written Answer to Unanswered Oral Question

Assessment of Deployment of Driverless Vehicles for Public Transport

Speakers

Summary

This question concerns the update and assessment of driverless vehicle deployment for public transport, as raised by Assoc Prof Fatimah Lateef. Minister Khaw Boon Wan stated that self-driving technology aims to address bus driver shortages and improve first-and-last-mile connectivity for commuters. He highlighted ongoing trials with Nanyang Technological University for buses starting mid-2018, alongside visitor shuttles being tested by ST Engineering and Sentosa. Further testing in one-north involves partners like A*STAR and nuTonomy to refine autonomous applications for urban environments and local climatic conditions. Widespread deployment is expected to be viable in 10 to 15 years as technology matures through these continued trials and limited deployments.

Transcript

62 Assoc Prof Fatimah Lateef asked the Minister for Transport whether he can provide the latest update and details pertaining to driverless vehicles for use in our public transportation system.

Mr Khaw Boon Wan: Self-driving technology, indeed, has the potential to transform public transport. For example, self-driving buses can help address the shortage of bus drivers. Self-driving pods or shuttles can be deployed at the neighbourhood level to further improve the first and last mile of a public transport journey. Commuters can summon these vehicles using their smartphones, and the vehicles will bring them in air-conditioned comfort from their doorsteps to the train station. This will be especially useful for the elderly, families with young children, and the less mobile.

Over the last two years, the Ministry of Transport has signed agreements with various private companies and research institutes to develop and trial such self-driving technologies and concepts. Nanyang Technological University (NTU) is developing self-driving buses for Singapore’s roads and climatic conditions. We expect the first on-road testing of NTU's self-driving buses to commence by the middle of 2018. A*STAR, Singapore-Massachusetts Institute of Technology Alliance for Research and Technology, Delphi Automotive Systems and nuTonomy are currently conducting self-driving trials in one-north Business Park which would be useful for first- and last-mile application. Singapore Technologies Engineering and Sentosa Development Corporation will be trialling a fleet of self-driving vehicles to ferry visitors within Sentosa, as Gardens by the Bay had done. Plans are underway for more trials.

There have been significant and rapid advances in self-driving technology and we expect it to be mature enough for widespread deployment in 10 to 15 years. Meanwhile, we will continue to press ahead with trials and limited deployment.