China Daily (Hong Kong)

Baidu’s Li: Self-driving vehicles used commercial­ly in 3-5 years

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

Large-scale commercial use of self-driving technology may become a reality sooner than expected, according to search giant Baidu Inc.

“It may take three to five years to put fully autonomous-driving vehicles on truly open roads,” Baidu Chairman and CEO Li Yanhong — also known as Robin Li — said on Thursday. Li, also a member of the 13th National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, spoke on the sidelines of the CPPCC’s closing meeting.

Miao Wei, minister of industry and informatio­n technology, said in an earlier interview that it would take eight to 10 years before self-driving vehicles are available for largescale commercial operations.

“I am more optimistic and believe that we might achieve that goal ahead of schedule,” Li said.

Baidu plans to mass-produce self-driving buses this year in cooperatio­n with commercial vehicle manufactur­er Xiamen King Long United Automotive Industry Co. They could run in designated areas, such as scenic spots, according to Li.

Baidu also will work with major car manufactur­ers next year to promote the developmen­t of self-driving technology. There are about 90 partners taking part in its open autonomous driving platform Apollo, Li said.

The Baidu CEO added that artificial intelligen­ce-enabled digital assistants with voice functions have stepped into

people’s daily lives, and there will be more AI applicatio­ns in the future. “AI will become an important driving force for China’s economic growth in the next 20 to 50 years.”

China expects vehicles with some autonomous functions will account for 50 percent of new vehicles sold in the country by 2020, according to a guideline released by the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission in January.

In order to improve and perfect the legal system for selfdrivin­g technologi­es, the government will speed up the drafting of regulation­s for public road tests of autonomous driving and revise the current road safety regulation­s “when conditions are mature”, according to the plan.

Traditiona­l car manufactur­ers are ramping up efforts to promote the large-scale commercial­ization of self-driving technologi­es. SAIC Motor Corp Ltd signed a deal with Intel Corp to develop its selfdrivin­g cars. BYD is working on self-driving technologi­es itself, as well as in cooperatio­n with Baidu.

However, industry analysts say there is a long way to go before fully autonomous cars are integrated into people’s daily lives.

“Intelligen­t vehicles with fully autonomous functions may account for 10 percent of the new vehicles in 2020,” said Yang Diange, dean of automobile engineerin­g at Tsinghua University, estimating that “self-driving vehicles will come into our daily lives in 2030.”

“More tests are needed before such vehicles can reach mass production and enter large-scale commercial applicatio­n because of widespread safety concerns,” said Zeng Zhiling, managing director of LMC Automotive Consulting Co.

Zeng warned that self-driving vehicles are vulnerable to cyber attacks. He said that since these vehicles are highly intelligen­t and networked, there is a possibilit­y that hackers could break into the system and pose a great danger to road safety.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Baidu CEO Li Yanhong, also known as Robin Li (right), and Deng Zhonghan, chief scientist of chipmaker Vimicro, are interviewe­d as members of the 13th National Committee of the CPPCC on the sidelines of the closing of the first session at the Great Hall...
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Baidu CEO Li Yanhong, also known as Robin Li (right), and Deng Zhonghan, chief scientist of chipmaker Vimicro, are interviewe­d as members of the 13th National Committee of the CPPCC on the sidelines of the closing of the first session at the Great Hall...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China