Automated Vehicles: Joint Report

Organisation: The Law Commission
Date of Publication: January 2022
Uploaded to Knowledge Centre: 1 February 2022

This report, published by the Law Commission of England and Wales and the Scottish Law Commission, makes recommendations for the safe and responsible introduction of self-driving vehicles.

It concludes that human drivers should not be legally accountable for road safety when behind the wheel of an autonomous car.

Many driver assistance features are currently available to help a human driver. The report anticipates that, in future, these features will develop to a point where an automated vehicle will be able to drive itself for at least part of a journey, without a human paying attention to the road. 

For example, a car may be able to drive itself on a motorway, or a shuttle bus may be able to navigate a particular route.

The report calls for a new Automated Vehicles Act, to regulate vehicles that can drive themselves. This would draw a clear distinction between features which just assist drivers, such as adaptive cruise control, and those that are self-driving.

Under the Law Commissions’ proposals, when a car is authorised by a regulatory agency as having “self-driving features” and those features are in-use, the person in the driving seat would no longer be responsible for how the car drives. 

Instead, the company or body that obtained the authorisation (an Authorised Self-Driving Entity) would face regulatory sanctions if anything goes wrong.

Download the report from the Law Commission website:

https://www.lawcom.gov.uk/project/automated-vehicles/