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Joint efforts driving autonomous autos


Global collaboration combined with govt action called for as car companies compete in a crowded field

Collaboration between global firms and local governments is vital for the future success of the autonomous driving industry, say several key Chinese players in the sector.

Both traditional vehicle makers, such as Toyota, BMW, Audi and Volvo, as well as tech giants such as Apple, Intel, Uber and Baidu, have collectively pumped billions of dollars into driverless vehicles in an attempt to advance the technology, test its safety and bring commercial products to market.

 Joint efforts driving autonomous autos

A fleet of JingChi autonomous vehicles in Guangzhou on Sept 26, as the Chinese startup announced a 5G partnership with China Unicom’s branch in Guangdong province. Provided to China Daily

It’s too early to determine who the winners will be, says Tony Han, CEO of JingChi, a Chinese startup that specializes in AI technology and robotics. Since being established in 2017, the firm has grown to have offices in Guangzhou, Beijing, Anqing, and Sunnyvale, California.

“Currently, we are all partners that work hard to push forward the entire autonomous driving industry,” he says, adding that the United States possesses the most advanced expertise and technology know-how in this field. “We believe a mutually beneficial relationship will be the driving force and eventually help reshape the way people travel.”

Echoing Han is James Peng, founder and CEO of Pony.ai, another Chinese autonomous driving startup that has raised $214 million (188 million euros; £170 million) since late 2016. He says a massive global market for fully autonomous driving is “not mature yet”, adding that “an expectation for an overnight shift from traditional driving to fully automotive driving is not realistic”.

Based in Fremont, California in the United States, Poni also operates in Beijing and Guangzhou, and announced its partnership with Guangzhou Automobile Group in February by launching its fully self-driving fleet on a 2.8-kilometer route.

The global self-driving vehicle market will undergo explosive growth in the next 10 years and reach an estimated value of $556.7 billion by 2026, according to Allied Market Research.

In China alone, a $14 billion market value is projected for intelligent connected vehicles by 2020, according to China’s Industry and Information Technology Minister Miao Wei, who spoke at the World Intelligent Connected Vehicles Conference in October in Beijing.

Baidu, which began autonomous driving research in 2013, has developed more than 100 self-driving minibuses powered by its Apollo platform, and will soon deploy them in Beijing, Shenzhen and foreign cities, its CEO, Robin Li, said in September.

JingChi, meanwhile, operates a fleet of 30 vehicles, which have gone 60,000 kilometers during testing with zero accidents so far. JingChi is planning for large-scale, commercial deployment of autonomous vehicles in China’s major cities by 2025, Han says.

“Our vehicles will operate without human intervention by using a combination of LiDAR (light detection and ranging), cameras and radar sensors, along with artificial intelligence to perceive the road conditions and choose the quickest and safest route to the final destination,” Han says.

No matter how ambitious the entrepreneurs are, and how rapidly the technology emerges, safety remains the top priority and benchmark with autonomous driving.

More than 90 percent of car accidents are caused by human error, such as fatigue, road rage and drunk driving, says Peng, adding that autonomous driving will be much safer and more reliable.

“Safety is the industry’s top priority,” he said.

In March, one of Uber’s autonomous cars killed a pedestrian during a test drive in Arizona, triggering a temporary suspension of similar tests by several US enterprises.

The integration of urban governance with algorithms and artificial intelligence, or the practice of smart cities, will ultimately benefit citizens, and help solve some of the most severe urbanization challenges, including traffic congestion, climate change and energy overconsumption, said Tang Jie, former vice-mayor of Shenzhen, at a global climate action summit held in San Francisco in September.

“However, further development of autonomous driving relies on the government, which offers regulatory support and invests in infrastructural upgrade,” Robin Li said in September.

Danial Sperling, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of California, Davis, said the government should play a more active and important role in regulating and shaping the autonomous driving industry.

“We will definitely have electric vehicles; we will definitely have automation. But we need to learn that the government should bring them all together with pooling and sharing, to avoid vehicle dependency,” Sperling says.

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(China Daily European Weekly 12/14/2018 page30)



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