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MPs and Senators to cast final votes on French low-emission zone ban
The government is attempting to bypass a controversial law dismantling the zones
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Hour by hour: see how diesel prices are falling in France today
Interactive graph to show how prices fall at thousands of stations from Thursday's peak of €2.398 per litre
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French fuel prices ‘should drop by 10c’ at thousands of service stations today
Caution over long-term drops due to market volatility remain
Look, no hands! Fancy test-driving an autonomous car?
Self-driving car technology development continues at speed
French car manufacturer PSA Group has become the first in the country to be granted official authorization to carry out testing of autonomous cars on public French roads, using ‘non-expert’ drivers.
The group, which owns Citroën and Peugeot, will begin testing in March on about 2,000km of French roads – with its own customers behind the wheel.
Since July 2015, professionally trained drivers have driven some 120,000km of Europe’s roads in PSA prototypes.
The group said in a statement that by 2020, some of its vehicles “will benefit from autonomous driving features enabling the driver to give the car full control”.
Competition to develop autonomous driving software is fierce in the car-making industry worldwide.
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In September 2016, Chinese-owned Swedish manufacturer Volvo teamed up with auto safety group Autoliv to develop driver assistance systems (ADAS) and autonomous drive (AD) systems, and also teamed up with Uber in a 300million deal to develop driverless cars. Volvo expect AD technology to be ready by 2021.
