ZF Friedrichshafen AG CEO delivers keynote address at the CAR Symposium

ZF Friedrichshafen AG CEO delivers keynote address at the CAR Symposium

  • Systems supplier ZF sees vehicle safety as an “enabler” for automotive megatrends
  • Network integration will help to make “Vision Zero” possible

Friedrichshafen/Bochum, 15-Feb-2017 — /EuropaWire/ — “Demands to vehicle safety are becoming increasingly complex due to new vehicle architectures and flexible use of internal space. Meeting these demands is necessary for autonomous vehicles and e-mobility to gain general acceptance.” Dr. Stefan Sommer, Chief Executive Officer of ZF Friedrichshafen AG, underlined this thesis in his keynote address at the CAR Symposium 2017 on February 1 in Bochum. With both megatrends, ZF is among the pioneers of automotive suppliers. Through the acquisition of TRW Automotive, it now boasts the most comprehensive portfolio of active and passive safety technologies.

“Autonomous driving and electromobility represent new challenges for vehicle safety,” said Sommer at this year’s CAR Symposium. “This is true not only for active safety as a prerequisite for autonomous driving but also for passive safety systems.” An example: The attraction of autonomous driving is not least that passengers may choose their seating position on a far more flexible basis than in conventional vehicles.

To nevertheless help ensure occupant safety, changes to the airbag systems will be required. The company is currently working on appropriate solutions. At the same time, alternative installation spaces – such as air cushions in the roof instead of in the steering wheel or dashboard – are also being developed and made ready for the market.

Coexistence of autonomous and non-autonomous vehicles

Although self-driving vehicles are expected to significantly reduce accidents in the future, they nevertheless need to be designed to move in traffic that will continue to be dominated by non-autonomous vehicles, which represent potential participants in an accident. The average age of passenger cars on German roads is currently 9.2 years and continues to rise. According to estimates of industry experts, the majority of new vehicles will be driven autonomously in 2037. On the other hand, more than 2 million vehicles will be older than 20 years and therefore mostly still steered conventionally.

Safety as prerequisite for acceptance and penetration

The necessity of new safety concepts for autonomous and electrically driven vehicles does not just have technological aspects. “No one would dream of calling for a ban on driving in snow, despite many serious accidents in January,” explained Sommer in his keynote address. “However, if a single accident occurs due to the introduction of a new technology – what happened with a self-driving car back in fall 2016 – the technology as such is questioned.”

Vision Zero conceivable only through network integration

ZF sees itself as obligated to fulfill the “Vision Zero” – traffic which causes neither accidents nor emissions. The networking of all road users will make it possible to come decisively closer to this objective. In his keynote address, Sommer outlined two development steps: “In the first step, advanced passive and active safety systems must become enablers of autonomous driving and electromobility. In the second step, networked traffic can prevent more and more accidents. Network integration and autonomous driving are necessary if the number of 1.2 million traffic deaths is to be reduced drastically in the coming decades.”

SOURCE: ZF Friedrichshafen AG

Press contact

Christoph Horn
Head of Corporate Communications
Phone: +49 7541 77-2705
christoph.horn@zf.com

Thomas Wenzel
Director External Communications
Phone: +49 7541 77-2543
thomas.wenzel@zf.com

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