New Straits Times

CHINESE STARTUPS IN A RUSH

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ACLUTCH of Chinese startups are accelerati­ng efforts to get autonomous vehicles onto roads in the world’s biggest auto market, a country their American peers from Alphabet Inc’s Waymo to General Motors Co’s Cruise may find tough to crack.

Roadstar.ai is testing electric selfdrivin­g cars in the southern metropolis of Shenzhen and hopes to get 1,500 of them into the business districts of major cities by 2020.

Sequoia Capital-backed Pony.ai planned to deploy a fleet of at least 20 self-driving vehicles for public ridehailin­g services in Guangzhou as soon as next year, said co-founder James Peng in a recent interview.

And Daimler-backed Momenta just inked a contract with the government of eastern Suzhou to deploy a self-driving fleet in the city within the year and open the service to citizens “at a suitable time”.

They join the likes of Baidu Inc. and NIO in taking advantage of local government­s’ eagerness to open their city streets to testing, as each vie to become a nexus for developing future mobility.

They’re making up for lost time and a deficit of crucial data but have two advantages: a central government keen on seeing 30 million autonomous vehicles on roads within a decade, and a massive base of 300 million-plus drivers.

“It remains difficult for foreign selfdrivin­g companies to gain a foothold in the Chinese market,” said Tong Xianqiao, chief executive officer and co- founder of Roadstar.ai, in a WeChat message in response to Bloomberg’s queries.

“In contrast, Chinese companies have a natural advantage domestical­ly.”

Waymo and Cruise are among the leaders in a global race to launch the world’s first driving business without human pilots. But their absence in China has spurred local entreprene­urs to develop their own solutions, turning the country into the world’s largest testing track.

Roadstar.ai is developing a Level 4 self-driving solution — with little human interventi­on — that it says will handle China’s infamous urban jungle, where drivers and pedestrian­s alike are known to flout traffic laws.

It aims to produce 200 cars equipped with its self-developed sensor kits and algorithms next year, in collaborat­ion with carmakers. By 2020, it plans to own a fleet of 1,500 self-driving electric cars to offer ride-hailing in the core districts of first-tier cities.

Two-year-old Pony.ai, which is working with manufactur­ers including Guangzhou Automobile Group Co, plans to deploy self-driving cars within a 30-sq km area of the southern city of Guangzhou.

It expects to fully commercial­ise the technology within three to five years in controlled settings such as ports or industrial parks.

“Autonomous vehicles present a tremendous opportunit­y,” said Peng, the co-founder. “The next step for us is to scale from prototype to a product fleet.”

Beijing-based startup Momenta, which raised US$46 million (RM186.17 million) last July from NIO Capital, Sequoia Capital China and Hillhouse Capital, is hoping its tie-up with Suzhou’s government will propagate its software, which senses roads and maps out routes.

Beijing considers self-driving technology critical to elevating the nation’s standing as part of its Made in China 2025 blueprint.

And investors have taken their cues from that resolve: Pony.ai just announced it had raised another US$102 million from investors including ClearVue Partners and Eight Roads, an arm of Fidelity Internatio­nal.

Roadstar.ai said it raised US$128 million in May.

China got into self-driving late and its players remained short on data and talent, Gu Junli, the Xpeng Motors vice president who oversees its 100-employee autonomous-driving operation in California, was quoted as saying by the People’s Daily this month.

It was imperative to build algorithms specifical­ly for local regulation­s and traffic scenarios, a more challengin­g task than for spacious and lighter traffic in the United States, said Tong.

“I believe only Chinese people can offer the self-driving solutions to China,” Gu was cited as saying.

 ?? SOURCE: PONY.AI VIA GLOBE NEWSWIRE ??
SOURCE: PONY.AI VIA GLOBE NEWSWIRE
 ?? SOURCE: PONY.AI VIA GLOBE NEWSWIRE ??
SOURCE: PONY.AI VIA GLOBE NEWSWIRE

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