Ottawa Citizen

THE NEXT TECH DARLING?

LeddarTech aims for breakthrou­gh as it leads charge in driverless car tech in Canada

- NATALIE WONG

Having built an impressive lead in artificial intelligen­ce, Canada is keen to do the same in driverless cars — specifical­ly the lidar (laser radar) technology that lets these vehicles see where they’re going.

The nation’s main contender is LeddarTech Inc. The Quebec Citybased company makes solid-state technology it says is better and cheaper than earlier versions of lidar and sells it to parts makers, which in turn bake it into their hardware.

LeddarTech has attracted bigname industry backers including Delphi Automotive, Germany’s Osram Licht and Fiat Chrysler’s parts division, which last month participat­ed in a US$101-million fundraisin­g round.

There’s a race on to get self-driving cars on the road over the next four years and lidar is a key component in making that possible. The market for the technology will grow tenfold to US$2.5 billion by 2027, according to Akhilesh Kona, a senior analyst at IHS Markit, and become much bigger as cars become increasing­ly autonomous.

LeddarTech has plenty of wellfinanc­ed rivals. Among them: Velodyne Lidar Inc., which has the backing of Ford Motor Co. and China’s Baidu Inc, and Alphabet Inc.’s Waymo, which is trying to develop its own lidar.

“Competitio­n exists simply because the opportunit­y is so great,” says LeddarTech chief executive officer Charles Boulanger. Those that survive will be rewarded with a “major pot of gold.”

Driverless cars “see” the world around them using data from cameras, radar and lidar, which bounces laser light off objects to assess shape and location.

High-speed processors crunch the data to provide 360-degree detection of lanes, traffic, pedestrian­s, signs, stoplights and anything else in the vehicle’s path. That enables it to decide, in real time, where to go.

Today’s mechanical version of lidar is clunky (it has been compared with spinning buckets of fried chicken) and fastened to the roof of a vehicle. With its moving parts, the technology is vulnerable to wear, tear and vibration. It also lacks sufficient range and is too expensive — from a few thousand dollars to as much as US$70,000 — to make mass production feasible.

Lidar companies are now shifting to solid-state technology — no moving parts — which is less susceptibl­e to mechanical failure and changing weather conditions.

Velodyne, which helped pioneer mechanical lidar, introduced a solid-state version of its technology this summer. The costs are starting to fall; Silicon Valley startup Quanergy Systems Inc. says it’s manufactur­ing a product for about US$250 and expects to bring that cost below US$100 in three to four years.

LeddarTech was spun out of the National Optics Institute, a government-funded research facility in Quebec City.

Back in the 1980s, the dean of Laval University at the time persuaded the federal and provincial government­s that optics and photonics were the future of tech. Not long after, a small research team began developing lidar in conjunctio­n with a research agency at the Department of National Defence, which wanted technology that could detect biological warfare agents.

About 10 years ago, LeddarTech researcher­s started working on solid-state lidar for autonomous cars — long before many of its competitor­s. While its technology still costs a few hundred dollars, the company says it produces images that are 25 times sharper than rival lidar, meaning a driverless car can more precisely maintain awareness of nearby pedestrian­s, vehicles and other objects.

LeddarTech’s only local competitio­n is another Quebec-based startup called Phantom Intelligen­ce, which secured an investment from Korean auto parts maker Sungwoo Hitech Co. Ltd. this summer.

Can LeddarTech duplicate Canada’s breakthrou­ghs in artificial intelligen­ce, which have shown up in Facebook’s facial recognitio­n algorithms, Google’s Photos app and even Japanese robots?

IHS Markit’s Kona says the company has a good chance of being a real contender because its platform can be easily adapted to a range of technologi­es and suppli-

 ?? LEDDARTECH/TWITTER ?? LeddarTech has attracted big-name backers to its self-driving car technology, specifical­ly the laser radar tech that allows the cars to see where they’re going.
LEDDARTECH/TWITTER LeddarTech has attracted big-name backers to its self-driving car technology, specifical­ly the laser radar tech that allows the cars to see where they’re going.

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