Bloomberg
Tesla Inc. is recalling hundreds of thousands of vehicles after US authorities said its automated-driving technology could increase the risk of a crash.
The automaker’s so-called Full Self-Driving Beta system “may allow the vehicle to act unsafe around intersections,†including travelling straight through from a turn lane and proceeding through steady-yellow traffic lights, according to a filing with the US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
The system’s errors “increase the risk of a collision if the driver does not intervene,†the filing said.
The recall affects 362,758 vehicles, including certain Model 3, Model X, Model Y and Model S units manufactured between 2016 and 2023. Tesla is expected to fix the issue through an over-the-air software update by April 15, NHTSA said in a statement.
The agency’s concerns raise new questions about a system that Tesla Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk sees as critical to the company’s long-term prospects.
“The overwhelming focus is on solving full self-driving,†Musk said in a June 2022 interview with Tesla fans on YouTube. “That’s essential. It’s really the difference between Tesla being worth a lot of money or worth basically zero.â€
While Musk didn’t address the specifics of NHTSA’s filing, he tweeted Thursday that the term “recall†was “flat wrong†since the issues can be fixed with a software update.
The company’s automated-driving technology is already under scrutiny from Washington. NHTSA has been looking into how it handles crash scenes since 2021 after a dozen collisions with first responders and other vehicles. The agency also opened an investigation last year into complaints of Tesla cars with Autopilot driver-assist that suddenly brake at high speeds.
NHTSA said in a separate statement Thursday that its investigations of Tesla’s Autopilot are still active.
The company has also been accused of exaggerating the capabilities of its technology.