When are autonomous trucks coming to market?
It’s a question that been asked repeatedly since these advanced trucks first appeared almost a decade ago.
At a press conference at its headquarters in Greensboro, North Carolina, Volvo Trucks North America said autonomous trucks should be considered a distinct mode of transportation going forward.

The new VNL tractor will be the technology platform for the first generation of Volvo autonomous trucks.
Photo: Jack Roberts
When are autonomous trucks coming to market?
It’s a question that been asked repeatedly since these advanced trucks first appeared almost a decade ago.
there are currently autonomous trucks available for sale. And many are running validation routes around North America. But to date, no truck OEM has yet entered into full scale production with this new technology.

Sasko Cuklev, head of on-road solutions for Volvo Autonomous Solutions speaks to journalists at the company's headquarters in Greensboro, North Carolina, on November 19.
Photo: Jack Roberts
But that might be about to change.
At a November 19 press briefing at Volvo Trucks North American headquarters in Greensboro, North Carolina, the global truck OEM hinted that its autonomous solution may not be far off at all.
Moreover, Sasko Cuklev, head of on-road solutions for Volvo Autonomous Solutions, said that autonomous trucks will be revolutionary when they come to market. So much so, he noted, that the industry should view them as a unique transportation mode.
In other words, as distinct a means of transporting goods as, say, air freight, maritime shipping, rail or human-driven trucks.
Volvo has been making tremendous strides in developing safe, reliable, autonomous solutions according to Cuklev.
Mot of Volvo’s efforts have been focused in limestone quarry operations in Norway.
Cuklev noted that Volvo has been operating eight trucks without human drivers for over a year-and-half there. These daily operations include a five-kilometer haul road and brutal artic weather conditions.

Volvo has been running eight autonomous trucks in mining operations in Norway to validate its self-driving technology.
Photo: Volvo Trucks
“And we’re backing those trucks up to crushers as well,” Cuklev explained. “A lot of developers say backing is especially difficult for autonomous trucks. But we’re doing it multiple times a day.”
Still, the “Holy Grail” for autonomous trucks are long-haul applications, Cuklev said.
And Volvo is making progress on that front too, according to Cuklev.
“Autonomous technology is not as simple as many people were led to believe it would be,” Cuklev explained. “Which is why today, at Volvo, we feel autonomous technology really needs to be looked at as an all-new way of transporting goods. Our society should view autonomous as a new mode of transportation. Just like you have air, rail, shipping and trucking. Soon we will also have autonomous transport. And that new transportation mode we’ll need an entirely new ecosystem to make that solution feasible.”
With those goals in mind, Volvo has been running two evaluation routes in Texas. One route is between Dallas and Houston. And the other is from Fort Worth to El Paso.
The routes are a bit short in terms of a solid business case for autonomous, Cuklev said.
But, he added, longer routes are coming as Volvo. And they will be part of building a network of service points that will be required to fully support autonomous trucks working in daily fleet operations.
“We are super confident in what we’re doing,” Cuklev said. “We have a very good plan on how to commercialize this technology. We have well defined steps going forward – always with an emphasis on safety.”
Volvo unveiled its new VNL Class 8 tractor in May. And in a sign as to how fast its autonomous solutions are developing, a self-driving version of the new truck debuted a mere four months later.
“The new VNL is the vehicle platform we will utilize when we launch our autonomous solution in Texas moving freight,” Cuklev said. “We are already pioneering that approach with partners like DHL and Uber Freight. This is a process of many steps. We have already worked out middle mile solutions. And our next step – which will begin any week now – will be to introduce autonomous functionality to our solution.”

A critical aspect for Volvo Autonomous Solutions is to offer customers a completely integrated vehicle designed from the ground up for driverless operations.
Photo: Volvo Trucks North America
The next steps, Cuklev added, will focus on a fully mature Volvo autonomous system.
“The big questions are what happens after that achievement?” he said. “Because we would like to scale this technology fast. And we are preparing for that now. Because when we release our autonomous solution, we want to be able to bring it into scale production as quickly as possible.”
A key aspect of that goal will be to the Aurora Driver autonomous control system into Volvo’s production line in New River Valley, Virginia.
“Our goal is not to produce fully integrated autonomous trucks in double-digit numbers,” Cuklev added. “But much higher, with high-volume production our ultimate goal.”
For fleets, that will mean the production of a Volvo truck designed, developed and built from the ground up with Aurora Driver fully integrated into its design. And that will include full-service support for all autonomous systems from certified Volvo dealers all across North America.
“We have already built our first batch of 25 of these trucks,” Cuklev said. “And as we get closer to our launch date, we will get immediate scale. But more importantly, we will be building those autonomous trucks to the same quality standards that we do with our standard VNL and other vehicles.”

The companies also said they plan to coordinate deployment planning across priority freight corridors and define routes and operational design domains for U.S. commercial service while laying the groundwork for expansion into key European markets.
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