(China Daily) Self-driving vehicles may soon be a common sight in China and the
industry could see rapid growth as the COVID-19 outbreak has underlined
the importance of such vehicles during an epidemic, industry experts
said on Tuesday.
"Autonomous driving has entered a new stage in China. We expect the
segment to see major consolidation this year," said Han Xu, founder and
CEO of WeRide, a Chinese smart mobility company.
"Investors have realized that autonomous driving will be implemented
on a large scale over the next three to five years. They have also
realized that it is no longer a high-risk investment and more capital is
needed to expand business and boost technological stability," he said.
Autonomous driving gained traction and investments recently as
investors started becoming more cautious about investing in a string of
industries after the epidemic.
The sector has been seeing a flurry of big deals like the autonomous
driving unit of Didi Chuxing getting a $300 million investment from
Japanese tech giant SoftBank. Another autonomous driving firm Pony.ai
finished its new round of funding totaling $462 million last month.
Wu Gansha, CEO of Chinese self-driving startup UISEE, believes that
the sector is now ready for a take-off. "Investors are more confident on
the commercialization of intelligent driving and hence willing to
invest. From this year, we should start seeing large-scale
commercialization of driverless vehicles," he said.
"We have been seeing a healthy pickup in orders," said Wu, whose
startup focuses on high-level autonomous driving and completed a new
round of financing in February.
During the epidemic, several hospitals and companies used
self-driving vehicles to deliver necessities like masks and meals to
patients and medical workers.
"Self driving has great application scenarios during the epidemic. If
pure self-driving can be achieved, it is ideal to transport suspected
patients as cross infection risks can be avoided," said Han from WeRide.
By the end of last year, WeRide had launched trial runs of its
Robo-Taxi in a 144-square-kilometer area in South China's Guangzhou
city. Passengers can order a self-driving taxi via its app and
experience a driverless journey.
Earlier this year, China unveiled a blueprint to boost autonomous
driving in the country. According to the blueprint, the country will
realize "scale production of vehicles capable of conditional autonomous
driving and commercialization of high-level autonomous vehicles in
certain scenarios by 2025".
"Smart vehicles have become a global strategy and China has a
strategic edge in developing smart cars with the complete automobile
industry and evolving information technology," the document said.
In March, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology
launched classification standards for autonomous driving in China, which
has pressed the fast-forward button for the country's autonomous
driving industry.
Buoyed by the brighter market prospects, Han from WeRide said that
his company plans to expand its operations in Guangzhou and deploy
several hundred units of RoboTaxi this year. He said that the company
could achieve complete unmanned vehicle operations in Guangzhou by next
year, once the existing stipulation on security personnel for the
vehicles is removed.
As of now, six cities in China have allowed autonomous vehicle makers
to undertake passenger tests, including Beijing, Shanghai, Chongqing
and Guangzhou.
Source: By Cheng Yu |
China Daily |
Updated: 2020-04-08 09:11

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