It looks like a bus, it sounds like a bus… it is a bus. However, this one is self-driving and believed to be the world’s first autonomous single-decker passenger service.
Journalists were summoned to a unit near Edinburgh to board the nine-tonne vehicle for a test run ahead of the official launch with passengers on Monday.
Paying punters will be able to ride along a 14-mile stretch between Fife and Scotland’s capital city.
The service will operate on a trial basis until 2025 with a fleet of five Alexander Dennis Enviro200AV vehicles.
However, the “driverless” boast doesn’t quite live up to the name.
This is a vehicle with a “safety driver” behind the wheel who guides the bus on the twists and turns.
He eventually nervously removed his hands on the famous Forth Road Bridge when the road became straight.
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The bus crawled along as the state-of-the-art sensors took control. All eyes were alert on the path ahead. A far cry from the usual relaxing experience.
It can do 50mph, but the media minders were nervous for anything going wrong during their “big moment”.
The reality is this is a pilot and requires double the manpower of a standard bus. There is also a ticket operator on board helping.
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There are questions about the sustainability of this in the “real world”. Businesses require cash and this model seems like a drain on resources in order to show off a new bit of technology.
The teams behind the bus were telling reporters about how there was big interest from Dubai and Tokyo as they pivot this towards the international market.
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But this is a long way off becoming the norm. It could 2040 before drivers are removed altogether. The pace of technological change may mean we all live in a different world by then.
Nevertheless, this is a big moment for Scottish and UK engineers who will proudly remember the moment they delivered the first “driverless” buses.