The Borneo Post

Renault-Nissan adopts Android system

- By Laurence Frost

PARIS: The Renault-NissanMits­ubishi car-making alliance has announced it will adopt Alphabet’s Google Android operating system, handing a victory to the US tech giant as it pushes for a bigger share of the infotainme­nt market.

Renault, Nissan and Mitsubishi, with combined sales of 10.6 million vehicles last year, said future models will “integrate Google applicatio­ns and services” including Maps and the voice- commanded Google Assistant.

The move, first reported by the Wall Street Journal, leans more heavily on Big Tech than large or luxury rival carmakers have hitherto been willing to do. Many fear losing control of customer relationsh­ips, data and potentiall­y significan­t future revenue from connected services.

Some smaller manufactur­ers such as Volvo Cars have decided to embed Android Auto in their vehicles. But the scale of the shift by Renault-NissanMits­ubishi may cause a broader rethink of costly stand- alone tech strategies.

“Major carmakers earlier were reluctant to do business with Google, but this has now changed,” said Jauke de Jong, a research analyst at AFS Group in Amsterdam. “More

Major carmakers earlier were reluctant to do business with Google, but this has now changed. More carmakers could follow suit and partner with Google.

carmakers could follow suit and partner with Google.”

Until now, carmakers have largely chosen Linux, Microsoft or QNX software to power infotainme­nt. That yields clunkier platforms they can control, but which offer little scope to add new apps or functional­ity.

The news may spell trouble for certain existing auto-tech suppliers such as mapping specialist TomTom, which counts Renault among its customers. Shares in the Dutch group fell by more than quarter after the announceme­nt.

In return for handing Google the infotainme­nt keys, the alliance will bring the full clout of Android’s thousands of apps to its brands’ line-ups - which include a strong contingent of affordably priced, no-frills models for emerging markets.

The partnershi­p promises “rich user experience­s that are currently available only outside the vehicle or, to a limited extent, by connecting an Android device to supported vehicles,” alliance developmen­t chief Hadi Zablit said. While many volume carmakers offer infotainme­nt “mirroring” to pair with Apple iPhones or Android smartphone­s, premium rivals such as BMW and Daimler’s Mercedes-Benz are investing heavily in their own operating systems, vocal assistants and connected services.

Renault- Nissan- Mitsubishi said the new infotainme­nt systems would also be integrated with remote vehicle diagnostic­s and over-the- air upgrade capabiliti­es, offered via the alliance’s own cloud-based service.

After nearly two decades of partnershi­p, Renault and Nissan are still integratin­g their own technologi­es, a process often fraught with tension. The choice of a third-party platform resolves questions of infotainme­nt leadership neutrally.

Renault owns a 43.4 per cent stake in Nissan, which in turn holds 15 per cent of Renault and 34 per cent of Mitsubishi Motors.

The first Android- equipped vehicles will launch in 2021, the alliance said, without disclosing any of the partnershi­p’s financial terms.

Jauke de Jong, AFS Group research analyst

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