Electric Volvo ES90 arrives in South Africa
Volvo Cars has introduced the new ES90 in South Africa, positioning it as the brand’s fully electric flagship sedan.
- New Energy Vehicles
- 13 March 2026
Hyundai Motor Company and Kia Corporation have unveiled Vision Pulse, an advanced safety technology designed to identify obstacles that drivers cannot see.
By harnessing ultra‑wide band (UWB) communication, the system delivers highly accurate, real‑time detection of surrounding objects, offering drivers an additional safeguard in busy or complex environments.
Cutting‑edge awareness through UWB:
Vision Pulse operates through UWB modules fitted to vehicles. These modules exchange signals with other UWB‑enabled items, ranging from smartphones to wearable devices and tracking tags carried by pedestrians or cyclists. By measuring the travel time of these signals, the system calculates precise object locations. Should a potential impact be forecast, alerts are issued instantly, providing critical time for driver intervention.
Many Hyundai and Kia models equipped with the Digital Key 2 system already include UWB hardware, allowing Vision Pulse functionality without any further installation requirements.
Moving beyond conventional blind‑spot systems:
Traditional blind‑spot solutions often depend on fixed infrastructure or slower communication channels, limiting their responsiveness. Vision Pulse overcomes these shortcomings by using rapid UWB radio transmissions, delivering both high accuracy and cost efficiency while reducing reliance on pricier sensors such as radar and LiDAR.
UWB’s broad bandwidth supports resilience against interference and enables signal penetration through obstacles. This capability allows Vision Pulse to function reliably in scenarios such as crowded junctions, heavy rain, or low light. The system detects objects within an approximate 10‑centimetre margin across distances of up to 100 metres and sustains over 99 per cent accuracy. Communication speeds as fast as one to five milliseconds ensure the system reacts almost instantaneously.
Enhanced predictive algorithms further strengthen performance by tracking multiple fast‑moving objects simultaneously, an essential feature for real‑world traffic environments.
Applications beyond motoring:
Hyundai and Kia anticipate Vision Pulse becoming valuable in a range of sectors. In industrial facilities, it may help reduce collisions between machinery and personnel. During emergency response operations, the technology could assist in locating individuals trapped beneath rubble.
The promotional video Sight Beyond Seeing showcases Vision Pulse in use on school buses. To support ease of adoption among young children, Hyundai and Kia created guardian‑angel‑shaped UWB keyrings that can attach to backpacks, doubling as soft nightlights to encourage regular charging.
Pilot testing is already under way at Kia’s PBV Conversion Centre and at Busan Port Authority, where the system is being evaluated within active industrial environments.
Toyota South Africa Motors (TSAM) returns as sponsor of the Absa Cape Epic for the fourth consecutive year, standing alongside Absa, which celebrates 20 years as title sponsor of the world’s toughest mountain bike stage race.
South African innovation leader and founding CEO of 1064 Degrees, Dean Furman, delivered a high energy wake up call to the automotive retail sector at the National Automobile Dealers’ Association’s (NADA) Connect 2026 conference, urging companies to stop treating artificial intelligence as futuristic and start treating it as fundamental.
The National Automobile Dealers’ Association (NADA) once again delivered a standout experience at its annual conference on 12 March.