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Frost & Sullivan projects nearly 40% of compact vehicles in Europe to have Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) by 2018

According to Frost & Sullivan, technological developments such as the integration of radar and camera as well as sensor fusion between multiple applications are enabling a price reduction which may well lead to a 40% penetration of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) in compact cars by 2018. ADAS includes systems such as driver monitoring, lane departure warning, intelligent headlamp control and traffic sign recognition.

ADAS is surely set to be more popular over the next decade as it will help achieve the European Union’s Transport Policy 2011–2020 which aims to reduce road fatalities by 50%. The growth of ADAS technology is certain as suppliers no longer stop with just developing a sensor for the premium vehicle segment and waiting for it to gain popularity. Instead, they take into account the requirements of all vehicle segments to develop a portfolio of sensors. To achieve the European Union’s target, it is therefore important to develop more low-cost DAS technologies and enable a wider acceptance of the safety systems.

—Frost & Sullivan Research Analyst Manish Garg

According to the Accident Research of the German Association of Insurers (GDV), lane departure warning alone can prevent up to 15% of road fatalities. Similarly, intersection assist can prevent up to 35% of accidents in Germany.

Suppliers such as Continental, TRW and Bosch are working closely with OEMs right from product concept to developing low-cost ADAS systems such as lane departure warning, traffic sign recognition, intelligent headlamp control and driver monitoring for mid-sized and compact cars as these are the segments that will help achieve economies of scale and bring down the price.

Continental recently developed a low-cost integrated ADAS system capable of performing multiple functions such as lane departure warning, intelligent headlamp control and driver monitoring system. TRW’s 24GHz forward-looking radar, a low-cost substitute for the camera, has been able to drive down the cost of DAS technology and is available as an option on the Lancia Delta hatchback. PSA Peugeot Citroen on the other hand has been capable of developing multiple low cost ADAS for their cars.

There is no reason to consider driver assistance as a luxury status symbol due to their high price and availability on high end luxury cars. Instead, a wider rollout of ADAS technology in European compact vehicles is expected over the next 2–3 years. Potential future regulations for ADAS systems following the truck and bus regulations already in place, and the introduction of insurance incentives would certainly assist in bringing DAS even to the compact and subcompact vehicles segment

SYNC revolutionized the infotainment market by bringing the hi-tech infotainment system to low-end cars; similarly, the low-cost multi-functional camera is set to revolutionize the safety market by bringing hi-end technology to compact cars.

—Manish Garg

Comments

HarveyD

Eventually, drivers assist equipment will reduce road accident and associated injuries and fatalities.

If it was made a must for all drivers who have accumulated more than 5 demerit points and all those in the 16 to 25 age group, it could reduce accidents by up to 50%.

TM

@Harvey - can you share some details of your calculations?

Maybe there will be a subroutine that moves you out of the left lane when someone behind you wants to pass and there is no one in the right lane?

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