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These are the cars we'll get before self-driving cars
Cadillac Super Cruise.
Cadillac’s Super Cruise will drive your ride, while making sure you still pay attention to the road.

LISBON — Before autonomous cars can drive us everywhere, they’ll need the equivalent of a learner’s permit: limited self-driving modes that require the driver to keep both hands on the wheel.

Executives at Cadillac and Renault-Nissan sketched out this roadmap — a less ambitious but possibly more realistic strategy than Tesla’s aggressive rollout of its Autopilot feature — in speeches at the Web Summit conference here.

One lane at a time

In a talk Tuesday morning, Renault-Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn touted the company’s progress but also warned of upcoming obstacles to self-driving cars.

The good news first: 60% of the buyers of the company’s first vehicle to offer an autonomous option, a Japanese-market minivan, pay the $1,000 and change to get the feature. However, that self-driving mode only works in a single lane of a highway. Nissan expects to add support for changing lanes by 2018, with city driving coming in 2020.

By then, Ghosn said, the company plans to have 10 autonomous models. But to make this “a technology that you can use everywhere and [is] flawless,” Renault-Nissan has work to do. One of the bigger challenges: dealing with the wide range of driver skills and behavior in, say, Tokyo versus Mumbai or Cairo.

“99% right is much easier than 100% right,” Ghosn said.

He asked governments to provide some sort of regulatory framework with room for self-driving technology — an effort that’s still in an early state at the US Department of Transportation. Car makers, in turn, need to get customers to trust the technology by answering their questions upfront.

Ghosn also spoke about Renault-Nissan’s electric-vehicle ambitions, which have benefited from increasingly cheaper batteries. The firm plans to sell an $8,000 electric car in China—“where the market is booming”—because its electric Leaf costs too much for many buyers there.

The car drives and watches you

Cadillac president Johan de Nysschen described a similar incremental approach, in an interview with Yahoo Finance on Tuesday and during a Web Summit talk on Wednesday,

“We see it as a gradual phased transition from scenario today to the ultimate scenario of full autonomous capability,” he said. The General Motors (GM) subsidiary will begin by adding a “Super Cruise” feature next year that will only drive the car on some roads and will actively monitor the driver’s attention — something de Nysschen called “supervised driving.”

First, Super Cruise will be geofenced to operate only on roads without oncoming traffic. Second, it will use multiple sensors to make sure your focus is on the road.