Finland may approve Tesla’s supervised self-driving software before EU vote

HELSINKI, (Reuters) – Finland may approve Tesla’s self-driving assistance system earlier than a European Union-wide decision expected in October, the country’s transport ​authority said on Tuesday.

The Netherlands in April became the first European ‌country to grant provisional approval for Tesla’s Full Self-Driving (FSD) system, in a first step towards a potential EU-wide rollout if backed by a qualified majority ​of member states.

Estonia and Belgium are among countries that have since ​allowed the technology, which allows cars to steer themselves, ⁠though some regulators have expressed caution about it.

  • “An EU-wide solution can be ​expected in October 2026. However, Traficom is prepared to proceed on ​a faster schedule after the summer if the necessary additional information has been obtained on the key areas of assessment,” the Finnish Transport and Communications Agency (Traficom) ​said in a statement.
  • It said it is assessing how quickly ​drivers can retake control, overtaking in low-visibility conditions on Finnish roads, and the ‌system’s ⁠speed offset feature, over which neighbouring Sweden and Norway have raised concerns.
  • The EU-wide committee vote is expected in October, with the next member state discussion on June 30.
  • Traficom said its overall view of the ​system was positive.
  • Around 6,500 ​cars in ⁠Finland are equipped with the system, equal to roughly 0.24% of the country’s 2.7 million passenger vehicles.
  • As ​Tesla’s FSD requires human supervision it is not ​considered fully ⁠autonomous, but Traficom said genuine self-driving vehicles may appear on Finnish roads as early as 2028.
  • Reuters reported in May that Finland is ⁠among a ​number of European countries Tesla approached ​after the Dutch approval, asking if they would be willing to follow suit.

 

Reporting by Essi ​Lehto and Marie Mannes, editing by Anna Ringstrom and Alexander Smith