Study of standards and procedures

The OECD Tractor Codes were launched in 1959 with the aim of establishing common rules and having the same safety protocols and procedures. The OECD is currently studying the possibility of developing standards and test procedures to certify autonomous vehicles in agriculture. As technology develops at a rapid pace, more and more companies are developing these types of vehicles. The challenge is to guarantee their efficiency and safety. However, there is a lack of clear, common rules for bringing these vehicles to market safely. The OECD is working with its member countries and all stakeholders to develop a global set of rules and regulations to facilitate the marketing of this new type of agricultural equipment.

This is how the draft test protocol for autonomous vehicles in agriculture was developed. The aim is to develop repeatable and reproducible indoor/outdoor laboratory tests and to explore the feasibility of developing a common test protocol focusing on: “Performance of systems involved in the safety of autonomous off-road agricultural vehicles”. In collaboration with INRAE, the OECD’s aim is to propose basic rules and protocols in the future that all member countries can follow, thereby ensuring fair competition.

The work can also help to identify the problems hindering the development and use of these new technologies. The test protocol can build on work already developed by other institutes/organisations and can guide discussions between OECD member countries. This is a particularly topical issue, and one that is also at the heart of many concerns of MASA, which has planned a specific survey in 2023, mainly to take stock of equipment.

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