GM’s Canadian Engineering Centre in Oshawa, Ontario, has been awarded a mandate to play a leading role in the building of autonomous driving vehicles. These vehicles will be part of a test fleet based at the GM Technical Centre in Warren,…
GM’s Canadian Engineering Centre in Oshawa, Ontario, has been awarded a mandate to play a leading role in the building of autonomous driving vehicles.
These vehicles will be part of a test fleet based at the GM Technical Centre in Warren, Michigan.
“Our Engineering Centre in Oshawa was a logical place to locate this important work and it is the next step in growing the new mandate of the Centre to focus on work related to the Connected Car,” said GM Canada’s president and managing director, Steve Carlisle. “The Province of Ontario’s leadership in allowing autonomous vehicle testing was a helpful support in securing this advanced technology work for our Canadian facility.”
The opportunity to realize fully autonomous vehicles has recently become a high profile issue for governments as billions of dollars are expected to be invested in new infrastructure. The Conference Board of Canada has suggested that autonomous cars could save Canadians $65 billion per year through less congestion, less fuel and fewer collisions and fatalities.
GM’s fleet of self-driving 2017 Chevrolet Volt electric vehicles will first be deployed as part of a broader test program at GM’s Technical Centre in Warren Michigan. Through this program, GM employees will reserve a Volt using a car-sharing app, then select a destination. GM’s autonomous technology will bring the vehicle to its destination and park it. The program will serve as a rapid-development laboratory to provide data and lessons to accelerate GM’s technical capabilities in autonomous vehicles.
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