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TORONTO, Ontario, February 13, 2019 – Speaking to a room full of key Canadian automotive industry influencers, Larry Hutchinson, President & CEO at Toyota Canada Inc., claimed that, in its race toward fully autonomous vehicles, the industry may have forgotten one very important truth: People still like to drive.
“I believe our industry is at a crucial fork in the road,” Hutchinson said. “We’re on the cusp of an important evolution in transportation.”
Even as vehicles are becoming increasingly electrified and automated, most consumers still enjoy driving. To Toyota, the two are not mutually exclusive. The company believes drivers want to be engaged - and that they want a vehicle that reflects their lifestyle and personality. If the auto industry ignores this, Hutchinson warns, they do so at their peril.
“Why have so many automakers lost their passion for driving,” he asked. “They seem to be so focused on the ‘next big thing’ - on the self-driving electric pod – they’re forgetting that driving is fun.”
He noted that, when you look at the concept vehicles of the future, you’ll often see a bland, autonomous pod that replaces the steering wheel with a computer screen and a pillow.
“It’s very easy to get caught up in a vision of a radically different model of mobility,” Hutchinson said. “A future where personal use vehicles give way to shared transportation devices that will autonomously ferry people and goods from place to place.”
In this vision, Hutchinson lamented, people are lifelessly staring at screens while their mode of transportation takes them where they want to go.
“The proposition that, given a choice, people would prefer to be idle occupants of a pod… that’s not Toyota’s vision… not even close,” he said. “As other automakers are working on vehicles that drive themselves - turning us into passive passengers - we’re incorporating advanced automated safety technologies in ways that enhance, rather than deaden, the driving experience.”
Instead of replacing the driver behind the wheel, Toyota’s Guardian approach is a teamwork concept that sees advanced automated safety technologies act as their personal co-pilot, enhancing their awareness and control of the vehicle, and helping them be a better driver.
Hutchinson believes that, in the future, cars will be more fun to drive, not less so, and emphasized that Toyota’s recent approach has been to build better, more exciting vehicles for people who love to drive.
“Lots of people will tell you the future of mobility is one of robotic, shared use vehicles… of autonomous pods and anonymous pod people,” he stated. “I don’t believe in pods.”
About Toyota Canada Inc.
Toyota Canada Inc. (TCI) is the exclusive Canadian distributor of Toyota and Lexus vehicles. Toyota has sold over 8 million vehicles in Canada through a national network of 287 Toyota and Lexus dealerships. Toyota is dedicated to bringing safety, quality, dependability and reliability in the vehicles Canadians drive and the service they receive. TCI’s head office is located in Toronto, with regional offices in Vancouver, Calgary, Montreal and Halifax and parts distribution centres in Toronto and Vancouver. Toyota operates two manufacturing facilities in Canada. Having produced more than eight million vehicles, popular Canadian models built at these facilities include Toyota RAV4, Toyota Corolla, Lexus RX 350 and RX 450h hybrid. Recent investments at its facilities in Ontario will allow for increased production of the top-selling Toyota RAV4 and RAV4 Hybrid models.
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