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Waymo recalls robotaxis for driving on flooded roads

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Why This Matters

The recall of Waymo's autonomous vehicles due to their inability to safely navigate flooded roads underscores the ongoing challenges of deploying driverless cars in diverse weather conditions. As the industry moves toward expanding autonomous services to more varied environments, addressing weather-related safety concerns becomes increasingly critical for consumer trust and regulatory approval.

Key Takeaways

is transportation editor with 10+ years of experience who covers EVs, public transportation, and aviation. His work has appeared in The New York Daily News and City & State.

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Waymo is recalling its autonomous driving software that allowed its vehicles to drive on flooded roads. The recall affects 3,791 vehicles that operate using Waymo’s fifth and sixth generation systems.

In documents filed with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the Alphabet-owned company said that an unoccupied Waymo robotaxi “encountered an untraversable flooded section of a roadway that has a 40 mph speed limit.” Despite detecting the flooded road, the vehicle “proceeded at reduced speed.” Waymo said it was currently working on a remedy. In the interim, the company has updated its vehicles to “increase weather-related constraints and updated the vehicles maps.”

While no one was injured in the incident, it highlights the risk for driverless car companies when encountering altered road conditions as a result of extreme weather. In its first few years of operation, Waymo has strategically stuck to cities with warmer, drier climates — places like Phoenix, Los Angeles, Atlanta, and Austin. But as it eyes a slate of East Coast cities, including Boston, New York City, and Washington, DC, for the next phase of its expansion, its abilities to handle more adverse weather will become a crucial test.

This is the first recall of Waymo’s sixth generation system, which rolled out earlier this year and is intended for “high volume production.” Waymo’s current fleet of Jaguar I-Pace vehicles runs on the company’s fifth generation technology, first rolled out in March 2020. That system has been recalled five times, including for driving passed stopped school buses and crashing into stationary objects.