The ViewAutonomous cars: time for Hong Kong to get in the driver’s seat
The city is perfectly placed for adoption of driverless vehicle technology but has been slow to get on board

History repeats itself. In March this year and last, this column called for someone in authority, or money, to give leadership to an innovation that will revolutionise our lives.
The driverless car.
It used to be the joke a couple of decades ago that if you wanted to get anything done in Singapore, you only had to say that Hong Kong had done it first. Think MTR, air-conditioned bridges, the Octopus payment scheme. Now, regretfully, in Hong Kong we cannot even gird our loins when our sister port launches a good idea. For last week, Singapore launched the first electric driverless taxis; and what do we do? Hello…?
It took a private company, nuTonomy, to do it – but with Singapore government capital. The first stage comprises a fleet of trial taxis with prescribed routes and stops. A human will for the moment monitor the robo-taxi, just as pilots sit in the cockpit of an airliner to make the passengers feel better.
If you want to see how disruptive this is going to be, the arch-disrupter, Uber, is disrupting its own business by launching (again, last week) an autonomous taxi service in Pittsburgh, USA. Uber is partnering with Volvo – a Chinese-owned company.
