The chief executive officer of the Nordic region's biggest road transport company predicts the trucks he relies on can start operating without drivers within the next 5-10 years.
Jens Bjoern Andersen, who drives a Tesla to work every day, giving him a first-hand view of how the technology is advancing, says the know-how is already there. His company, DSV, is looking into the opportunities that self-driving trucks will create for the world's fourth-largest freight forwarder.
"All we need is the regulatory steps and perhaps a fine-tuning of the technology," Andersen said in a phone interview. "Sometimes, when I drive home from work, I go most of the way almost without touching the brake or the gas and I only need to hold my hands on the steering wheel because the law says I must. But the technology is already there."
The first step will probably allow driverless trucks on highways, possibly in a lane reserved for other self-driving vehicles, the CEO said. It will probably take a lot longer before the technology is used in cities, he said.
"Fully self-driving trucks that also handle the distribution stage in big cities like Paris, London or Copenhagen, are many years away," he said.