China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Mobike to roll out service in UK

- By MA SI and BO LEUNG masi@chinadaily.com.cn By FAN FEIFEI in Wuhan fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese bike-sharing major Mobike said on Tuesday that it will launch services in the United Kingdom in Manchester and Salford at the end of this month as it ramps up efforts to compete with rivals such as ofo in overseas markets.

Mobike, backed by internet giant Tencent Holdings Ltd, said it will roll out 1,000 bikes at the end of June. After the scheme is up and running, the company will consider future expansion.

The move is part of Mobike’s ambitious plan to expand its presence in the European continent. The company said it will launch services to a series of European cities over the next few months.

Weiwei Hu, founder of Mobike, said: “We’re very excited to make Manchester and Salford Mobike’s first European partners. They have long been a European leader in culture, innovation and technology.”

This came shortly after one of Mobike’s most successful domestic competitor­s ofo came to the UK in April, which launched 50 bikes in Cambridge as part of a pilot program.

Andy Burnham, the mayor of Greater Manchester, said he hopes many people will swap their cars for bikes. He vowed to take a positive approach in promoting cycling in the region.

“We’re conscious that our city center is a complex and busy area already,” Burnham said. “Transport for Greater Manchester has been working hard to establish a voluntary code of working with Mobike to make sure the service operates in a way that doesn’t inconvenie­nce other road users, pedestrian­s or city center traders.”

People using the shared bikes are usually charged for every 30 minute slot they have them, but details of the pricing structure for Manchester have not yet been released.

“If successful, it could play an important part of our long-term plans for cycling in the region and for making travel easier and more sustainabl­e,” Burnham said.

Mobike launched its bike-sharing service and has since rolled out schemes in China and Singapore. It now operates 5 million bikes. Greater Manchester is now the 100th city to host the service.

Mobike and ofo are locked in a fierce competitio­n to vie for supremacy of the burgeoning sector. Their rental bikes are available at no cost to the taxpayer, unlike those championed by former London mayor Boris Johnson, the so-called “Boris bikes”, that are partially funded by Transport for London. Firm starts to build facility for new flexible display panels in Wuhan

Shenzhen China Star Optoelectr­onics Technology Co Ltd, a major Chinese display panel manufactur­er, formally started constructi­on of a sixth-generation LTPSAMOLED display panel production line on Tuesday in Wuhan, Hubei province.

The move aims to break the monopoly of South Korean companies in the area of flexible display panels for smartphone­s.

With a total investment of 35 billion yuan ($5.1 billion), the project is expected to begin production in the second quarter of 2019 and achieve mass production in the first quarter of 2020, with 45,000 modules set to be manufactur­ed each month.

Located in Wuhan’s Optical Valley, the project will produce small and mediumsize­d display panels with high-resolution, flexible and foldable functions for highend smartphone­s.

As a subsidiary of TV marker TCL Corp, Shenzhen-based CSOT said nearly 1.16 million square meters of AMOLED smartphone panels will be produced annually after the project goes into full production, which will satisfy about 5 percent of the total global demand of the AMOLED smartphone panel industry.

South Korea tech giant Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd currently holds a dominant position in the AMOLED technology and products, accounting for a market share of around 90 percent.

The Wuhan production line will create more than 5,000 jobs, give impetus to the upgrading of the panel industry and enhance the competitiv­eness of Chinese flexible display panel manufactur­ers in the global market, according to the company.

“There might be a huge potential for growth in the flexible and foldable display field, but the supply will be inadequate in the next few years… Chinese enterprise­s should make efforts to increase investment in this sector to break the monopoly of their South Korean counterpar­ts,” said Li Dongsheng, chairman and CEO of TCL.

CSOT has also establishe­d a 4.5-generation flexible OLED R&D line, focusing on developing flexible and foldable Li Dongsheng, manufactur­ing technologi­es.

Furthermor­e, the company has gradually had a layout in the upstream industry chain of semiconduc­tor display, including raw materials and equipment, and along with the constructi­on of the project, more than 1,000 industry experts will be attracted to Wuhan, Li added.

Statistics from industry consultanc­y CINNO Research showed the shipment of flexible AMOLED smartphone panels came up to 55 million pieces in 2016, and it is expected that this number will rise to 160 million pieces in 2017, with an annual compound growth of 88.2 percent by 2020.

According to data consultanc­y Digitimes Research, Chinese AMOLED panel manufactur­ers will begin to challenge the leading position of Samsung in 2019 as they continuous­ly increased inputs in the field.

“The demand for AMOLED panels will witness a rapid growth. Domestic smartphone makers, such as Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd and Xiaomi Corp have applied AMOLED panels into their flagship highend products,” said Li Yaqin, vice-president of Sigmaintel­l Consulting Co Ltd, a panel industry consultanc­y.

Li added that apart from smartphone­s and tablets, AMOLED also have a broad applicatio­n in wearables, virtual reality or augmented reality devices, and other emerging display areas.

AMOLED technology is physically flexible with a fast response, high contrast and wide visual angles, compared with traditiona­l liquid crystal display panels.

In May, BOE Technology Group Co Ltd, another leading Chinese supplier of semiconduc­tor display products, said its first 6th-generation flexible AMOLED display screen production line had become operationa­l in Chengdu.

number of bikes that Mobike is operating There might be a huge potential for growth in the flexible and foldable display field, but the supply will be inadequate in the next few years.” CEO of TCL

 ?? ZHOU CHAO / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Workers check equipment in a plant of Shenzhen China Star Optoelectr­onics Technology Co Ltd in Wuhan, capital of Hubei province.
ZHOU CHAO / FOR CHINA DAILY Workers check equipment in a plant of Shenzhen China Star Optoelectr­onics Technology Co Ltd in Wuhan, capital of Hubei province.

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