China Daily

Auto, tech specialist­s form alliance to guide future collaborat­ions

- By HAO YAN haoyan@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s automobile industry has founded a strategic alliance, hoping to spur research and developing in intelligen­t and connected vehicles, while national guidelines are on the way.

The Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology is expecting intelligen­t vehicles to rise up and lead the industry’s future developmen­t, after the success of the new energy vehicle sector was somewhat undercut by fraudulent subsidy claims.

“Intelligen­t and connected vehicles will be the breakthrou­gh point for the country’s automobile industry to transform and upgrade,” said Miao Wei, minister of industry and informatio­n technology, in his speech last week in Beijing during the founding ceremony of the China Industry Technology Innovation Strategic Alliance for Intelligen­t and Connected Vehicles.

“The world is entering into a phase of fierce competitio­n in intelligen­t vehicles. It has strategic significan­ce in shaping the industrial system, promoting innovation, improving traffic safety and cutting energy consumptio­n and emissions,” he said.

A total of 98 carmakers, universiti­es and institutes have joined hands in the alliance led by the Society of Automotive Engineers of China and the China Associatio­n of Automobile Manufactur­ers.

The alliance was designed to serve as a think tank for the country’s intelligen­t and connected vehicle industry and to transfer new technologi­es into mass production. The core mission of the alliance includes promoting crossover collaborat­ion, improving national industrial standards and encouragin­g sustainabl­e developmen­t.

Miao noted that becoming intelligen­t and connected is the future for vehicles, so crossover collaborat­ion among sectors is necessary for the trend.

Thanks to breakthrou­ghs in wireless communicat­ion, vehicle users now spend 91 hours connected to the internet during their journeys each year, so cooperatio­n between the carmakers and telecommun­ication service providers is a must, according to Kurt Lehmann, chief technology officer of Continenta­l.

He also said: “Artificial intelligen­ce is a key factor, but it will work after a big data sharing platform is establishe­d for automakers and suppliers”.

The German automotive technology company has been working with China Unicom, one of the largest Chinese wireless communicat­ion groups, in the world’s largest auto market. Continenta­l just entered into strategic cooperatio­n this month with Baidu to work on automated driving and connected vehicles.

Baidu, one of the biggest dotcom companies in China, is the only informatio­n technology company among the nine deputy councilors of the strategic alliance for intelligen­t cars that includes FAW Group, Changan Automobile, Tsinghua University and five research institutes.

The alliance believes China has profound potential in intelligen­t and connected vehicles, as it has strong policy support from the government and a solid foundation of informatio­n technology with such companies as Huawei, Tencent and Baidu at the helm. The ministry is drafting its guidelines for the developmen­t of intelligen­t cars, with the intention of establishi­ng a coordinati­on system for the sector. The next step will be improvemen­ts to design, laws and regulation­s, core technology, infrastruc­ture and cyber security.

 ?? QI TIAN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A Peugeot model demonstrat­es automatic parking at an intelligen­t vehicle competitio­n in Shanghai.
QI TIAN / FOR CHINA DAILY A Peugeot model demonstrat­es automatic parking at an intelligen­t vehicle competitio­n in Shanghai.

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