400-Ton Driverless Trucks Headed to Alberta Oil Fields

Canada鈥檚 largest oil-company said it will be purchasing driverless trucks, each weighing 400 tons, to work the Alberta oil fields,
Suncor Energy signed a five-year deal with Japanese manufacturer Komatsu for 175 鈥渁utonomous-ready鈥 heavy haulers capable of operating without a driver to be used at its mining operations, the paper reported.
The move comes as oil prices have been plummeting and oil companies are looking to cut costs and boost productivity, according to the paper. Suncor already has laid off 1,000 people this year.
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The announcement has stoked fears of significant job losses for the company鈥檚 1,000 heavy-haul operators.
鈥淚t鈥檚 very concerning to us as to what the future may hold,鈥 Ken Smith, president of Unifor Local 707A, representing 3,300 Suncor employees, told the Herald.
Suncor's chief financial officer, Alister Cowan, told investors the company is working to replace its fleet of heavy haulers with automated trucks 鈥渂y the end of the decade.鈥
鈥淭hat will take 800 people off our site, Cowan said. 鈥淎t an average [salary] of $200,000 per person, you can see the savings we鈥檙e going to get from an operations perspective.
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Autonomous truck technology is being pushed by companies such as Daimler, which recently introduced a self-driving truck, and the manufacturer is pushing for governments to speed approval of the technology.
Peterbilt Motors Co. also has demonstrated 听in which听cameras replace mirrors and infrared capability lights up a deer or a person on a dark night.
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