Furious taxi drivers repeatedly interrupted a London Assembly session discussing 'robotaxis' on Wednesday, as autonomous vehicle operators Waymo and Wayve defended the safety of driverless cars.
Disruptions at City Hall
London's Private Hire Vehicle (PHV) sector, which includes more than 120,000 drivers, faces potential threats from companies planning to deploy autonomous vehicles on London's roads within weeks. Concerns have been raised multiple times at City Hall, with the Mayor of London acknowledging this month that their future is a 'huge question' that must be addressed.
The Transport Committee, which is investigating how driverless vehicles would operate in the capital, met with sector representatives last Friday. However, emotions boiled over during a cross-party committee hearing on Wednesday, with individuals believed to be from the PHV sector launching furious tirades at representatives from Wayve and Waymo, both testing autonomous vehicles in London.
After the fifth interruption, committee chair Caroline Russell appealed to the public gallery: 'We have heard from PHV drivers and we have questions we want to put to our invited guests. Every time there is disruption in the gallery, we are taking out time we could be using to put the serious and worrying points we heard last week to them. Let us do our job - if you disrupt the meeting, we will just waste all the time when we have very serious questions to put to the guests.'
Safety and Job Concerns
London Assembly Member Elly Baker, who sits on the Transport Committee, told the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS): 'The drivers were expressing concerns and worries about the rollout of robocabs. This relates to their loss of earnings and especially a feeling of authorities not listening to drivers - they feel cut out of this conversation about what is going to happen to hundreds of thousands of jobs. They feel it is happening around them, rather than with their engagement.'
The committee questioned guests about lingering safety concerns regarding the mass rollout of robotaxis on London's congested road network. Issues raised included cyclist safety, especially if driverless vehicles drop customers off in busy cycle lanes.
Tom Bogdanowicz, Senior Policy Officer at the London Cycling Campaign, told Assembly Members: 'We don't want a vehicle entering the cycle lane where the cyclist isn't aware. The vehicles must understand they can't drive directly into a cycle lane - that needs to be thought through before we have these vehicles in full use.'
Operators Defend Safety Record
Ben Loewenstein, Head of Policy and Government Affairs in the UK and Europe division of Waymo, said data shows autonomous vehicles would make roads 'safer for people to cycle and walk in'. He added: 'It is the combination of all our sensors that give us a 360-degree view of the situation. The data that we have produced has been peer reviewed and independently verified, and shows that we are making roads safer.'
Operators also highlighted the strict regulation process they are undergoing before allowing vehicles to be truly driverless. Loewenstein said: 'This is arguably the most stringent set of requirements that any operator has to go through. The UK has taken a globally leading role in the development of this framework.'
Sarah Gates, Vice President of Global Affairs and Assurance at Wayve, added: 'To deploy these vehicles in the UK, you must meet a standard of careful and competent driver. Our belief is that the vehicles go far beyond that. In over 88 per cent of accidents today, the contributing factor is tiredness, emotion, distraction, being under the influence. These vehicles will never suffer from these things. These vehicles will have to go through incredibly thorough testing. They currently have an operator at the vehicle - I want to reassure everyone that we are taking a phased approach to this. We have never had a serious incident in the UK and we have been operating here since 2018.'



