Carnegie Mellon University researchers conclude that automation will likely reduce electric vehicles’ range by 5%–10% in suburban driving and 10%–15% in city driving.
The loss of range stems from added weight, more computing load, and potentially more drag because sensing equipment can make vehicles less aerodynamic.
The intrigue: The paper says the results show that fears of autonomous vehicle equipment sapping the efficacy of electric drivetrains appear unfounded, noting…
As Axios transportation expert Joann Muller reported in August, GM sees all-electric autonomous cars having an advantage over hybrid- and gasoline-powered models.
But rival Ford’s first autonomous vehicle will be a hybrid, which it says is the most practical path to start until electric vehicle battery costs come down.
The bottom line: The results suggest there’s no inherent tradeoff between the safety and other gains of autonomous vehicles and cutting CO2 through vehicle electrification.
“You don’t have to choose between the benefits of automation and the benefits of electrification,” co-author Parth Vaishnav tells me.
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