China Daily (Hong Kong)

Baidu buses stepping up a gear

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stations as well as elderly people at communitie­s in Japan, it said.

“This year marks the first year of commercial­ization for autonomous driving. From the volume production of Apolong, we can truly see that autonomous driving is making great strides,” Li said.

Apolong, which is outfitted with Baidu’s Apollo autonomous driving system, can complete self-driving operations such as obstacle avoidance, swerving and automatic transshipm­ent. The buses will initially be put to use in last-mile travel scenarios such as tourist spots, airports and other enclosed areas.

The tech giant also unveiled on Wednesday the artificial intelligen­ce chip Kunlun, which can be built to accommodat­e the high performanc­e requiremen­ts of a wide variety of AI scenarios, such as data centers, public clouds and autonomous vehicles.

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

Local authoritie­s in Beijing released the country’s first guideline on road tests of autonomous vehicles last December, and unveiled a closed testing ground for autonomous cars in February.

Zeng Zhiling, managing director of LMC Automotive Consulting Co, is bullish on the applicatio­n of self-driving technologi­es in public transporta­tion as the operating routes of buses are relatively fixed and less personal privacy issues will be involved.

“The reason why Baidu chose to export its Apolong mini bus to Japan lies in the fact that Japan is now facing population aging and a labor shortage, and the self-driving technology will solve these problems,” said Zeng.

However, Zeng said it will still take two to three years to realize the large-scale commercial use of autonomous vehicles due to safety concerns.

Baidu is not alone in the field of autonomous driving. Tencent Holdings Ltd received its first license from Shenzhen municipal government to test intelligen­t connected vehicles on designated roads in May, and SAIC Motor Corp Ltd has inked a deal with Intel Corp to develop its self-driving cars.

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