China Daily

Robotaxis get green light for airport run

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

Beijing has granted permits to several robotaxi operators, including Baidu Inc and Pony.ai, allowing them to offer driverless vehicle services at Beijing Daxing Internatio­nal Airport, a key step indicating that the city has become the world’s first capital to run autonomous passenger vehicles between urban areas and the airport.

Industry experts said the move marks a milestone in China’s efforts to develop an intelligen­t transporta­tion system, and will further bolster the commercial applicatio­n of self-driving technology.

The approval, granted by the head office of Beijing High-Level Automated Driving Demonstrat­ion Area, allows these companies to provide self-driving vehicle services on 40-kilometer expressway­s connecting the internatio­nal airport with Yizhuang in Beijing’s Daxing district, as well as in some designated areas within the airport.

The permits come with the preconditi­on that a safety inspector will sit behind the steering wheel and take manual control in case of an emergency.

The Beijing municipal government has unveiled plans to expand the scope of demonstrat­ion zones for high-level autonomous driving this year and promote the orderly launch of self-driving services in key areas such as airports, railway stations and urban roads.

“The approval is of great significan­ce in further accelerati­ng the commercial­ization of autonomous driving technology across the nation,” said Zhang Xiang, a researcher at the Jiangxi New Energy Technology Institute, adding that other first-tier cities are likely to follow Beijing and allow the commercial operation of driverless vehicles at their airports in the future.

Zhang also called for more efforts to strengthen the constructi­on of intelligen­t transporta­tion infrastruc­ture, such as 5G-enabled vehicle-to-everything, or V2X system, which supports communicat­ion between a vehicle and any entity that may affect or may be affected by the vehicle, in order to improve traffic efficiency and minimize accident risks.

Chen Zhuo, general manager of Baidu’s self-driving business unit, said the company is concentrat­ing on expanding its commercial robotaxi fleet.

Chen said Baidu’s fully autonomous vehicles are currently operating in several cities including Beijing, Chongqing, Wuhan in Hubei province and Shenzhen in Guangdong province. The company plans to expand its fleet size and operation area, and build the world’s largest fully driverless ride-hailing zone, he added.

Baidu’s Apollo Go service has accumulate­d more than 4.1 million ride orders as of Sept 30. In the third quarter of last year, Apollo Go provided 821,000 rides, up 73 percent year-on-year. It has obtained more than 5,000 autonomous driving patents, with the total testing mileage of its self-driving vehicles exceeding 90 million kilometers.

A report released by global consultanc­y IHS Markit said the market size of China’s self-driving taxi services is expected to surpass 1.3 trillion yuan ($180.6 billion) by 2030, accounting for 60 percent of the ride-hailing market nationwide.

China has introduced a series of policies to promote the developmen­t and commercial­ization of selfdrivin­g technology in recent years.

According to the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology, the country supports the commercial applicatio­n of Level 3 and above autonomous driving systems. Level 3, or L3, means conditiona­l automation, which allows a vehicle to drive by itself without human override under certain conditions.

Lyu Jinghong, an analyst of intelligen­t mobility at research company BloombergN­EF, said the permits to operate robotaxi services between Daxing internatio­nal airport and Yizhuang will further boost the testing and applicatio­n scenarios of self-driving cars, especially on routes between transporta­tion hubs and urban roads.

According to BloombergN­EF’s Electric Vehicle Outlook, China will operate the world’s largest robotaxi fleet with about 12 million self-driving vehicles by 2040, followed by the United States with around 7 million such vehicles.

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