Embedded
System Demand Could Reach Almost 19M Unis by 2020
Boston, MA - March 11, 2014 - NHTSA (National Highway and Traffic Safety
Administration) recently announced that it will begin steps to bring
vehicle-to-vehicle communication technology for new light vehicles. The
US Transportation Secretary, Anthony Foxx,
said that while he is committed to mandating the technology, there is
no target date set. The recent Strategy Analytics report, V2X: A Safety
Benefit For Automotive, But How Should It Be Deployed? lays out the
market potential of embedded V2X (Vehicle to
X) systems should such a mandate occur.
Click here for the report:
https://www.strategyanalytics.com/default.aspx?mod=reportabstractviewer&a0=9458
A number of demonstrations
have taken place showing the safety benefits of V2X, such as pedestrian
detection by American Honda, using smartphones embedded with an enabled
chipset from Qualcomm, and electronic brake
lights by Ford, when a driver is alerted by the emergency braking of a
vehicle beyond the driver’s sight. The formation of DSRC (Dedicated
Short Range Communication) standards from existing Wi-Fi technologies
have ensured reliable connectivity and low latency
needed for safety benefits to function.
However, V2X faces many challenges, including:
· -The cost premium that prevents consumer uptake
· - The resulting lack of critical mass needed to enable V2X to perform as a viable safety system
· -The security of the V2X system needed to ensure data privacy and to prevent hacking intrusion
·
- Demand from lower-cost mobile phone-based systems that could compete against V2X.
“Wi-Fi for non-safety
applications, such as infotainment, is being used as the volume platform
from which safety functions can be added at little additional cost,”
said
Kevin Mak, Senior Analyst in the
Automotive Electronics Service (AES) at Strategy Analytics. He
added, “Vendors are designing flexible systems in order to increase
economies of scale that would lower cost and thus increase penetration.
At the same time, further development and future
standards aim to allay security fears. While a US Mandate can generate
the necessary economies of scale, the industry must not rely on it.”