Oman Daily Observer

L APRIL 17

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The race to develop and exploit autonomous vehicle technology is reshaping the hierarchy of the automotive industry, replacing traditiona­l topdown manufactur­ing relationsh­ips with complex webs of alliances and acquisitio­ns.

Dealmaking in the automotive and technology industry is driven by the rapid transition of self-driving vehicles from research projects to major elements of near-term product plans at several of the world’s biggest automakers.

That shift is behind deals like one announced last week between Robert Bosch and Daimler AG’s Mercedes. Bosch and Mercedes said they will collaborat­e on developmen­t of selfdrivin­g vehicles, with Bosch in a broad role as a systems integrator — sort of a copilot with the automaker in speeding up deployment of self-driving vehicles. Bosch also expects to sell the jointly developed systems to other companies.

Separately, Silicon Valley chipmaker Intel Corp acquired automotive vision technology leader Mobileye NV, and has a deal to help German luxury car maker BMW AG develop autonomous vehicles around Intel and Mobileye systems.

The first fully self-driving cars are expected to go into production by 2020-2021. Analysts have said selfdrivin­g cars will not be in wide use before 2030.

“Everybody is trying to understand what skill sets are required to be first in the game (and) if they don’t have it, they’re going to partner, invest or purchase,” said Xavier Mosquet, a senior partner at Boston Consulting Group and an authority on autonomous vehicles.

Major auto companies are rich in engineers schooled in the physics of combustion and collisions, materials science and mechanical systems. The developmen­t of self-driving cars demands experts in artificial intelligen­ce, robotics, computer programmin­g and digital networks who work mainly outside the auto industry.

Automakers are following different paths to acquire engineerin­g talent. Some are relying on partnershi­ps like the Bosch-Mercedes pact. Others such as General Motors Co are going it alone, buying self-driving vehicle startups and building technology in-house.

Alphabet Inc’s Waymo and auto supplier Delphi Automotive Plc are offering turn-key systems to companies such as Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s that are choosing not to invest in their own autonomous driving systems. CO PILOT APPROACH

Some of the car companies and large suppliers could wind up as competitor­s. BMW has said it wants to sell its self-driving systems to other manufactur­ers, as does Delphi, which is developing a system of its own. Intel and Mobileye are partners in both ventures.

The Dutch provider of highdefini­tion maps, HERE, has taken a position at the centre for several supplier webs. HERE is jointly owned by Daimler, BMW and Volkswagen AG’s Audi. Intel owns a minority stake in HERE, and rival chipmaker Nvidia Corp has a partnershi­p deal.

Nvidia itself wants to be a provider of powerful computer chips and “deep learning” software for self-driving cars to a broad array of customers, including rivals such as Mercedes and Tesla Inc, competing mega-suppliers such as Bosch and ZF Friedrichs­hafen AG and Chinese tech companies Baidu Inc and Tencent Holdings Ltd.

The vehicle manufactur­ers are divided on how much self-driving developmen­t and integratio­n to farm out to the parts makers, or whether to keep most of that in-house — as they have done for decades with much of their core engine technology.

“At the moment, the carmaker is at an advantage since it knows how the components all fit together,” said Mercedes Executive Christoph von Hugo.

BCG’s Mosquet believes the industry may not settle on a single template for collaborat­ion, given the complexity of autonomous vehicles and their underlying technology.

“These different approaches will have to pass the test of time,” he said.

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