Proposal to amend ECE/TRANS/WP.29/2026/139 to modify para. 4.2.2.3.8.1. subparagraph (b) to state gaze directed to the driving task relevant area, amend para. 6.3.2.2.3. to replace approval authority with assessment, amend Annex 5 table 5 rows 1 and 2 column 7 to specify fallback to a mitigated risk condition and set deceleration at 4 m/s², amend Annex 6 para. 5.3.1. to remove brackets, amend Annex 6 para. 5.3.2. table to insert Mandatory in row 1 column 2 and specify recording interval of -7 to +7 seconds for visual images, and remove the bracket after table 5.3.2.
AC.1 adopted all amendments proposals to UN Regulations submitted by GRVA. AC.2 supported a swap between the GRVA session in October 2026 and the WP.1 session in September 2026 and discussed possibilities to change working methods. AC.3 welcomed progress on development of a new UN GTR and a new UN Regulation on ADS and noted the status report on ACPE activities. WP.29/1188 contains further details.
The agenda includes items on artificial intelligence in automotive, automated and connected vehicles including ADS, workshops, UN Regulation No. 157, UN Regulations Nos. 155 and 156, advanced driver assistance systems, steering equipment, emergency lane keeping systems, advanced emergency braking and blind spot information systems, electronic stability control, motorcycle braking, and UN Regulation No. 90. Additional agenda items address Revision 3 to the 1958 Agreement, climate change mitigation strategy, meeting arrangements, and programme of work.
The session is scheduled for May 19, 2026, from 05:30 to 08:00 EDT. The agenda includes discussion of UN GTR 22 and UN GTR 25 regulatory topics covering conditioning cycles, SOCE readiness monitor, MPRs, SOCR, mutual recognition, FCEVs, highly integrated systems, efficient test methods, OICA comments, MPRs and energy throughput, normal usage indices, Part C virtual distance verification, Annex 2 alternative test method, and battery replacement provisions. UN GTR 25 Amendment 2 must be submitted to March 2027 GRPE by December 2026 deadline.
The Informal Working Group on EV/HFCV Retrofit Systems held its eighth meeting on 21 April 2026. The group discussed cybersecurity principles, requiring retrofitted vehicles not to reduce safety or cybersecurity performance compared with UN R155 requirements, with differentiated approaches for base vehicles approved or not approved to UN R155. Braking compliance, EMC testing references, and UN draft regulation changes including renaming to “vehicles intended to be transformed into pure electric vehicles” and introducing Electric Powertrain Retrofit Systems definitions were addressed. PTI-related aspects and the need for written contributions were highlighted before providing the draft regulation to GRPE in October.
This document is a draft Guidance and Interpretation Document (GID) for UN Global Technical Regulation and UN Regulation on Automated Driving Systems, based on GRVA/2026/3 as amended by GRVA-24-29 and WP.29-198-09. The GID provides explanatory text, guidance, and examples to support implementation of ADS requirements without introducing new obligations. It covers scope, definitions, application for approval, approval procedures, ADS performance requirements in nominal, critical, and failure situations, interactions between ADS and users, safety management systems, test environments including simulation credibility frameworks, safety case requirements, post-deployment safety monitoring with reportable occurrences, and compliance assessment procedures. The document clarifies terminology including operational states of ADS features, critical occurrences, driving situations, and mitigated risk conditions, and provides detailed guidance on ODD definition, safety case structure, confirmatory testing approaches, and in-service reporting templates with threshold definitions for critical occurrences.
Proposal to define service life values by region or country of usage, establish methodology for calculating realistic GHG emissions and energy consumption during vehicle use stage at various detail levels, determine discrepancy factors based on real-world performance data, apply deterioration factors to account for vehicle aging effects, quantify leakage emissions including hydrogen and methane, assess maintenance and consumables impacts through manufacturer-provided frequency data or alternative methodologies, and collect primary and secondary data on driving activity, vehicle lifetime, fuel consumption, and maintenance replacement intervals. Service life values for passenger cars shall align with average age of vehicles at point of recycling within the same country, with regional default values provided in Annex 1 to the Resolution.
No documents available.