Tesla just
became the first automaker to truly show how the insurance industry is bound to
change as self-driving cars hit the road.
Tesla has
quietly been selling car insurance with its vehicles in Asia as part of its
vision to one day include insurance in the final price of its vehicles. The
move is meant to account for the fact that Autopilot makes Tesla cars much
safer than traditional ones on the road today.
Tesla isn’t
wrong to argue that insurance premiums should be adjusted to account for its
cars being safer — the National Highway Traffic Administration found that crash
rates for Tesla vehicles have plummeted 40% since Autopilot was first installed
in 2015.
Tesla's
quiet experiment shows how the insurance industry will need to change as
self-driving cars hit the road. The general consensus is if self-driving cars
reduce the number of collisions, there should be a reduction in the risk
premium.
That's going
to hit the insurance industry hard. The personal auto insurance sector could
shrink to 40% of its current size within 25 years as cars become safer thanks
to self-driving tech, according to a report by the global accounting firm KPMG.
Who's at
fault?
Questions
regarding liability are somewhat easier to answer when considering Level 4 or 5
self-driving cars, which refers to vehicles that can drive without any human
intervention whatsoever.
Google and
Ford are two companies pursuing fully self-driving cars. Ford actually plans to
roll out a fleet of driverless cars without a steering wheel or pedals in 2021,
showing how people won't play any role in driving fully self-driving cars.
"Under
the current structure that we have today, it is the manufacturers who will bear
the liability in that situation because the driver isn’t going to be doing
anything," Geoffrey Drake, a partner at King & Spalding’s Tort
Litigation & Environmental Group directing the firm’s Autonomous and
Connected Vehicles initiative, told Business Insider.
“Presumably
it will be how the computer was programmed, how the vehicle was instructed to
operate, that would be causing that accident," he said.
A precedent
has already been set for automakers to take full responsibility — Volvo said in
2015 that it will accept full liability in the event its self-driving car gets
in a crash.
That means
manufacturers will be more liable than ever before as the burden is no longer
on a driver to properly control the vehicle. Attaching liability to sellers and
manufacturers will be expensive, as the standard to establish a defect is vague
and unpredictable.
Bearing that
in mind, the liability question gets a bit more complicated when considering
Level 2 or 3 autonomy. This is when the car can handle certain tasks on its
own, like driving on a highway, but a driver is still in charge. Tesla
Autopilot is considered a Level 2 system.
This issue
came into focus when a Tesla driver died in a fatal accident while his Model S
was operating in Autopilot.
At the time
of the May 2016 accident, a Tesla Model S failed to brake when a truck was
making a left turn in front of it. The car passed under the truck and,
ultimately, drove off the road into a power pole, killing the driver.
Tesla wrote
in a blog post following the May accident that the Autopilot system did not
notice "the white side of the tractor trailer against a brightly lit sky,
so the brake was not applied."
NHTSA
conducted a six-month investigation into the accident and determined Tesla
Autopilot was not at fault because the driver had enough time (7 seconds) to
brake. NHTSA also said Autopilot shouldn’t have been expected to detect traffic
crossing in front of the car.
The incident
showed how a driver can still be liable for a crash in a Level 2 autonomous
system, even if the car is actually driving at the time the accident occurs.
But more importantly, it shows how insurance doesn't become obsolete simply
because of autonomous tech, as accidents can, and will, still happen.
That being
said, it's important not to conflate the Tesla Autopilot accident as proof that
autonomous tech is dangerous. NHTSA already proved otherwise by showing how
Tesla vehicle crash rates of plummeted since Autopilot was installed.
Widespread
adoption of self-driving cars could eliminate 90% of auto accidents in the US,
according to a report by McKinsey & Co.
But Tesla
shows we're already seeing the number of accidents being reduced as automakers
install autonomous technology in their cars, even if the cars aren't fully
self-driving yet.
That means
the premium prices will have to fall to account for that fact that cars are
inherently getting safer.
Motor
insurance accounts for 42% of Property and Casualty insurance, which is a $200
billion market in the US alone, according to the KPMG report. A comprehensive
motor insurance policy usually covers loss due to theft, fire, or collision to
both the vehicle itself and a third-party property. However, collision claims
account for around 80% of the total claim cost, meaning they come with the
highest risk premium.
Insurers are
already preparing for the ripple effects of that reality. Insurers like
Cincinnati Financial and Mercury Genera have already noted in SEC filings that
driverless cars have the potential to threaten their business models.
The
government's hands-off approach
Even though
lingering questions about liability remain, Drake said it seems unnecessary for
NHTSA to set regulations addressing the issue as the insurance industry seems
well-equipped to adapt as self-driving cars hit the road.
Anders
Eugensson, Volvo’s director of government affairs, also said it’s unnecessary
for the government to set regulations determining liability.
“If you look
at product liability today there is always a process determining who is liable
and if there is shared liability,” Eugensson wrote in an email. “The
self-driving cars will need to have data recorders which will give all the
information needed to determine the circumstances around a crash. This will
then be up to the courts to evaluate this and decide on the liabilities.”
Experts
agree that there will be an inevitable series of lawsuits as self-driving cars
hit the road that will allow legal responsibility to be determined over time.
NHTSA did
not reply to Business Insider’s requests for comment for this article. But it
seems likely NHTSA will take a hands-off approach as the government hasn't
shown signs it will release regulations for self-driving cars, despite pleas
from major automakers to do so.
NHTSA
released guidelines for self-driving vehicles that ask states to develop uniform
policies for self-driving cars to avoid disparate state-by-state regulations.
With the
government unlikely to intervene, at least in the near future, it will be up to
the insurance industry to adjust for the arrival of self-driving cars.
Tesla CEO
Elon Musk made a similar point during the company’s most recent earnings call
as well.
"If we
find that the insurance providers are not matching the insurance proportionate
to the risk of the car then if we need to we will in-source it," Musk
said. "But I think we’ll find that insurance providers do adjust the
insurance cost proportionate to the risk of a Tesla."
(Business
Insider)
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