China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Shanghai takes another step to push connected car road tests

- By WANG YING in Shanghai wang_ying@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s first batch of car plates for road tests of connected cars was issued in Shanghai on Thursday, allowing vehicles to be test driven on a 5.6 kilometerl­ong road, which demonstrat­es the lead the city has taken in applying intelligen­t and connected car technologi­es across the country.

Two intelligen­t connected vehicles made their first open road test at the National Intelligen­t Connected Vehicle (Shanghai) Pilot Zone, China’s first intelligen­t connected car demonstrat­ion area, on Thursday afternoon.

SAIC Motor Corp Ltd (SAIC Motor), the largest auto company on China’s A-share market, and Shanghai-based electric car startup NextEV have received a total of three car plates for testing their intelligen­t connected cars.

Drivers are required to have at least 50 hours of experience in operating driverless systems and the test drive should abide by existing regulation­s.

SAIC plans to release massproduc­ed cars this year equipped with intelligen­t driving technologi­es to help improve traffic flow, access to parking and driving safety.

Since 2013, SAIC has tested intelligen­t driving in closed laboratori­es, roads, expressway­s, undergroun­d parking garages and other specific areas. The total vehicle testing distance totaled 50,000 kilometers.

On Thursday, Shanghai also issued regulation­s for intelligen­t connected cars, becoming the second Chinese city to release rules regarding road tests of autonomous vehicles after Beijing.

Intelligen­t connected vehicles, or connected cars, can be seen as a moving network. They not only have access to internet, but also intelligen­t connection­s with other vehicles, traffic and the environmen­t, which will make the drive safer, easier, more comfortabl­e and efficient.

The Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology has set a goal that by 2020, half of China’s new cars and vehicles will become intelligen­t, wireless networks will cover 90 percent of cars in major Chinese cities, and all cars will be covered by China’s homegrown satellite navigation system Beidou.

“The rules and regulation­s are Shanghai’s answer to the global automotive industry’s ongoing transition and innovation. The city aims to build an automobile sector that is high-end, intelligen­t and connected,” said Huang Ou, deputy director of the Shanghai Municipal Commission of Economy and Informatio­n Technology.

The 5.6 kilometer open road for test drives is located in Jiading district. According to the district’s deputy head Lu Zufang, there are as many as 200 test scenarios for intelligen­t driving within the closed testing area.

The automotive sector in Shanghai grew 19.1 percent year-on-year to 677.4 billion yuan ($106.7 billion) in revenue in 2017, accounting for 19.9 percent of the city’s total industrial output value.

 ?? GAO ERQIANG / CHINA DAILY ?? An intelligen­t connected vehicle takes part in road tests on Thursday in Shanghai.
GAO ERQIANG / CHINA DAILY An intelligen­t connected vehicle takes part in road tests on Thursday in Shanghai.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States