Honda has received a permit from the state of California to drive its autonomous vehicles on public streets, joining companies ranging from Google to Volkswagen in testing the fast-growing technology.
Honda Gets California Approval for Self-Driving Cars on Roads
Honda is the 10th car maker allowed by the state to road-test autonomous vehicles.


The California Department of Motor Vehicles on its website listed Honda as the most recent of 10 companies that had received the self-driving permits as of Friday.
Other companies already approved include Daimler’s Mercedes Benz, Tesla, Nissan and BMW.
Honda, which is deploying advanced driver-assistance systems across its Honda and Acura models, is one of many car makers investing in self-driving technology. Some, including Tesla and BMW, already offer semi-autonomous features.
The Japanese car maker already has a secure autonomous vehicle testing facility in Concord, Calif., northeast of San Francisco, where such cars could get a test run before on-road testing, a spokesman said.
California is one of a handful of states, along with Michigan, Florida and Nevada, that have passed legislation enabling testing of self-driving cars on public roads.
Google and other automotive manufacturers and suppliers have said the technology to build self-driving cars should be ready by 2020.
(Reporting by Alexandria Sage; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)
This article originally appeared on Recode.net.











