Lucid Motors plans to equip its new Air luxury electric sedan with a driver assistance system when the first cars roll off an Arizona assembly line in early 2021, Lucid said on Tuesday.
The Lucid Air, which will compete with the Tesla Model S, will come standard with such features as adaptive cruise control, lane centering, automatic emergency brakes and automated parking.
It will also be one of the first production vehicles to be equipped with standard lidar, a laser-based sensor that detects obstacles and objects, including pedestrians, as part of the vehicle's collision avoidance system.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk has said Teslas do not need lidar because their other sensors -- mainly camera and radar -- provide sufficient object detection when the vehicle is in semi-automated Autopilot mode. He has derided the use of lidar, which is far more costly than other sensors, as "a fool's errand."
Lucid CEO Peter Rawlinson is the former chief engineer of the…