
Daimler, the parent company of Mercedes Benz, has already started testing its semi-truck in Nevada and Germany. Volvo and a Volkswagen subsidiary are also testing autonomous trucks in Europe, with Volkswagen’s managing over 2,000km without taking over control.

Autonomous trucks will reduce accidents on the road and might allow truckers — an industry that has a 90 percent labor turnover rate — to watch movies or read books instead of constantly watching the road, which might lead to a lower turnover rate.
But that short-term advantage for truck drivers will be lost once regulators let autonomous trucks drive on the road without a human inside. That is bound to bring a swift end to the freight business, at least for drivers.
Electric trucks another innovative step
Autonomous functionality is not the only innovation coming to trucks in the near future. A Salt Lake City-based startup, using the first half of Nikola Tesla’s as their brand name, has announced plans to launch a Class 8 electric truck, named the Nikola One.This is not like other electric vehicles however, it features a turbine that continues to power the car, making it self-sufficient. If it happens to turn out of juice, it has a fuel agnostic car that accepts natural gas, making it the safest and cheapest car to run on the roads.
Nikola Motors promises a 1,200 mile range and 1 million miles of free fuel, though the latter might be a promotion for the first few hundred buyers.
It also plans to utilize self-driving systems in the future to improve fuel efficiency.
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