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Young guns drive disruptive change in the car sector

TE Headshot JonThe rapid pace of technological change in the automotive sector in recent years has surprised everyone: consumers, industry commentators, and – perhaps most of all – carmakers themselves.

Take autonomous vehicles. A decade ago the prospect of self-driving cars was at best a fringe concept: an area of research with one foot in reality but the other firmly in the realms of science fiction.

Autonomous driving
Most automotive OEMs have plans for driverless vehicles

Today, along with electric powertrain technology, autonomy is a cornerstone of the sector’s plans for the future, with almost every major carmaker placing it at the heart of their plans for the future.

In our latest special report we take a look at one of the key drivers behind this revolution: the irresistible influence of relatively new entrants to the automotive world. The likes of Tesla, Google and, more recently, ride-sharing pioneer Uber.

051114tesla
Elon Musk's firm has been a force for disruptive change

Unconstrained by traditional car industry methods of technology development and testing, and less risk averse than the incumbents, these organisations have invested heavily in the autonomous dream. And traditional carmakers, perhaps afraid of being left behind, have been swept along by their more aggressive approach. Interestingly, one factor that almost certainly isn’t driving this change is consumer demand.

Whenever we cover the topic in this publication many readers admit that the prospect of ceding control to a robot leaves them cold. And there seems to be little evidence elsewhere that drivers are crying-out for the technology. However, the industry is clearly banking on this changing, and in an effort to win consumer confidence is focusing its efforts on stressing the safety benefits of handing over control to a computer.

Volvo Cars and Uber join forces to develop autonomous driving cars
Volvo and Uber recently joined forces to develop autonomous cars

As we report, Tesla has been particularly bullish in this regard: arguing that it would be morally wrong to let negative media reports or concerns over a slow to adapt legal system stand in the way of technology that it believes will save lives.

Whatever your view, there’s no doubt that it’s an exciting time to be joining the sector, with the rise of new concepts creating fresh new opportunities for engineers (as illustrated in our recent careers feature) and exciting commercial avenues for the more nimble members of the industry’s supply chain. Our article on Coventry pod car manufacturer RDM group is an interesting case in point.