Manila Bulletin

China ride-hailing giant Didi eyes purpose-built fleet

As market shifts

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BEIJING/DETROIT (Reuters) – China's Didi Chuxing, already disrupting the global ride-hailing market and taking on US rival Uber, has its sights set on an even bigger potential prize: Designing and getting built its own dedicated fleet of Didi cars.

The firm has put together teams of automotive designers and engineers, and is now looking to work with establishe­d car makers to develop "purpose-built" vehicles, people close to the company told Reuters, a move that could shake up the auto market in China and beyond.

The move underscore­s how tech firms, from software makers for selfdrivin­g vehicles to car-sharing platforms, are disrupting traditiona­l automakers such as Ford Motor and Nissan, amid major shifts towards electric cars and pay-per-use models.

In response, some global automakers are now starting to bill themselves as "mobility" companies that do more than just build and sell vehicles.

Didi officials say the disruptive change sweeping the industry means there is a clear mutual interest in new players like itself and traditiona­l manufactur­ers working together to develop and improve ride-hailing and sharing platforms.

"Traditiona­l automakers have different skillsets and understand­ing of the market, and those are all valuable to us," Kevin Chen, general manager of Didi's automotive service platform, told Reuters in an interview.

"It's not like only we understand the customer. We are open to every form of cooperatio­n."

Didi is China's biggest ride-hailing company, cementing its dominance when it bought out Uber's operations in the country in 2016, and is preparing to launch car-sharing and other ondemand transport services.

It currently uses regular passenger cars, but says as it moves forward it sees a need for more dedicated "purpose-built" vehicles. Many would likely be electric vehicles, either allelectri­c battery cars or plug-in electric hybrids.

Didi on Tuesday laid out plans at an event in Beijing for an alliance with 31 auto industry partners to develop a new mobility business model in China and beyond for sharing cars.

The alliance aims to develop "unified standards for the design and manufactur­ing of new energy vehicles, developmen­t of intelligen­t driving technologi­es, and planning of charging facilities," the firm said.

It will also help Didi develop its purpose-built cars, with the company offering its customer and operationa­l skills to automakers wanting to develop their own ride-sharing services in return for design expertise.

Didi already has a small but expanding team of automotive designers, engineers, quality control and battery experts, according to the three sources close to the company.

Those experts are scrambling to develop vehicles for a shared car service the Beijing-based company is testing in Hangzhou, in eastern China, for an eventual nationwide rollout, they said.

"We're designing customized cars because without hardware product, you can't be a serious mobility company," one of the people said.

Three people close to the company said GAC Motor and CHJ Automotive have already began collaborat­ing on projects with Didi to design purposebui­lt electric vehicles (EVs).

The move signals that, even as a host of establishe­d automakers gear up to show off their latest models when the Beijing auto show opens later this week, a new battlegrou­nd could be opening up in the automotive engineerin­g and design centers of some ride-hailing and car-sharing services companies.

As car-hailing becomes an increasing­ly popular option for commuting and running errands in congested cities such as Beijing and Shanghai, Didi is betting that vehicles purpose-built for such services could start to replace familiar everyday automobile­s like the Toyota Camry or the Honda Civic.

Industry experts and officials remain divided on how quickly such a future might arrive.

The people close to Didi pointed to the fact that most personal vehicles sit idle in parking lots for 22 hours a day or more. On top that, "parking is expensive, you need to maintain your car and pay insurance to drive," one of them said.

Uber Technologi­es, Inc., the largest US ride and delivery services firm, has not yet begun to build the sort of in-house design capability that Didi is contemplat­ing. Uber does not have a formal design group, but it has began working with a number of vehicle manufactur­ers across topics that might include future vehicle design, according to a spokespers­on.

A recent partnershi­p with Toyota Motor Corp., which has a minority stake in the company, calls for Uber to provide design feedback on the interior of Toyota's e-Palette self-driving vehicle. Didi has struck a similar deal with Toyota.

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