After several years of experimentation, France committed to a national strategy for the development of automated road mobility at the end of 2017. Anne-Marie Idrac, former Minister, has been appointed as the senior official responsible for this strategy and a collaborative working method between public authorities and private players, led by France Véhicules Autonomes, has been set up. The law of December 24, 2019 on the orientation of mobilities (LOM) opened the possibility of adapting the legislation to the case of the circulation of automated vehicles on the public highway. Clément Beaune, Minister of Transport announced this September 1 that the regulatory framework is now effective.
The French government has made the development of autonomous vehicles a key element of its mobility policy, in particular to provide solutions for territories and rural areas that do not currently benefit from efficient public transport solutions.
The national strategy for the development of autonomous vehicles
The national strategy for the development of autonomous vehicles presented on May 14, 2018 by the Government, proposes a series of ten priority actions aimed at facilitating the emergence and development of these technologies, helping the French industry to position itself on this particularly buoyant market, but also meeting the challenge of the safety and acceptability of these innovations. With this objective in mind, the government has made changes to the French regulatory framework: the PACTE law allows the testing of vehicles up to the highest level of driving delegation, by specifying the liability regime in the driving delegation phase. In June 2018, the Government also launched a call for projects for large-scale experiments, as part of the Programme d'Investissements d'Avenir (PIA). The EVRA call for projects aims to support projects for experimenting with marketable autonomous vehicle use cases in the field of individual, shared or collective mobility, freight and logistics. Two 3-year projects, worth €120 million including €42 million in subsidies, totalling 16 experiments, have been selected:- The SAM project (Safety and Acceptability of Autonomous Driving and Mobility), led by the Automotive Platform (PFA);
- The ENA project (Experimentation of Autonomous Shuttles), led by the French Institute of Transport, Planning and Networks Sciences and Technologies (IFSTTAR).
