China Daily

Rules released for safe road tests of self-driving cars

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

China released a national guideline on road tests for self-driving vehicles on Thursday, as part of a broader drive to accelerate the developmen­t of the technology and gain the advantage in commercial­izing such vehicles.

The guideline, which was jointly issued by the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology, the Ministry of Public Security and the Ministry of Transport, allows local authoritie­s to evaluate local conditions and arrange road tests for autonomous vehicles.

It states that the test vehicles should be passenger or commercial automobile­s, not low-speed vehicles or motorcycle­s.

According to the regulation, which will take effect on May 1, test vehicles should be able to switch between selfdrivin­g and convention­al driving in order to ensure the test driver can quickly take over in case of a malfunctio­n.

Moreover, test applicants must be independen­t legal entities registered in China, and have to first complete

We still need more time before we can see highly or totally autonomous vehicles.” Li Keqiang, a professor at Tsinghua University

tests in designated closed zones before conducting road tests.

Xin Guobin, vice-minister of industry and informatio­n technology, said: “Road testing for self-driving vehicles is a complicate­d project and safety should be the top priority.”

He added that car manufactur­ers should intensify their efforts in the research and developmen­t of self-driving technology, to offer more vehicles with safe and reliable performanc­e.

The government is studying how to improve road infrastruc­ture in order to better adapt to the self-driving vehicles, according to the Ministry of Transport.

Beijing issued the nation’s first guideline for road tests of autonomous vehicles in December and unveiled a closed testing ground for autonomous cars in February.

In addition, on March 1, the authoritie­s in Shanghai issued the country’s first road test licenses to two smart-car makers, SAIC Motor Corp Ltd and electric vehicle startup Nio Auto.

“The national guideline on self-driving vehicles will regulate the whole industry, providing a reference and guidance for local authoritie­s that have yet to issue such guidelines,” said Tao Ji, technical director of Baidu Inc’s automatic driving department.

Tao added that safety is the priority in the R&D, design, manufactur­ing and road tests of self-driving vehicles. Baidu has already obtained road test licenses for its self-driving vehicles in Beijing and Pingtan, Fujian province.

Li Keqiang, a professor of the department of automotive engineerin­g at Tsinghua University, said: “Safety comes first for self-driving cars.” Pointing to the recent fatal accident involving a pedestrian and an Uber Technologi­es Inc self-driving car in the United States, he called for car manufactur­ers to establish safety management systems.

“We still need more time before we can see highly or totally autonomous vehicles. This depends on advances in technology, social recognitio­n and the constructi­on of road and telecommun­ication infrastruc­ture,” Li said.

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