Intelligent, connected cars hold keys to the future
The Chinese government said it is paying great attention to the development of intelligent connected vehicles and considers the sector a vital way to ease the burden on transportation, energy consumption and environmental pollution, a top official said.
“By 2020, the market scale of the country’s intelligent connected vehicles sector is expected to exceed 100 billion yuan ($14.5 billion),” said Minister of Industry and Information Technology Miao Wei at the World Intelligent Connected Vehicles Conference held in Beijing from Oct 18 to 21.
“A new era of the automobile industry is here,” he said. “The development of intelligent connected vehicles can drive the technological reform and upgrading of the automobile industry.”
With the Chinese government fostering the development of intelligent connected vehicles, several cities have enacted laws and regulations for autonomous driving trials, including Beijing, Shanghai, Chongqing, Guangzhou and Shenzhen in Guangdong province, and Changchun in Jilin province.
Chen Jining, mayor of Beijing, said the capital city has regarded the intelligent connected vehicles sector as one of the key development directions for advanced industry since last year, and has introduced special supportive policies to promote open road tests for self-driving vehicles.
Beijing will commit itself to taking the lead in building the fifthgeneration internet of vehicles to form a complete technological system of intelligent connected vehicles that meet the requirements of advanced autonomous driving, known as Level 4, said the white paper by the Beijing Commission of Economy and Information Technology, issued on the sidelines of the conference.
A 50,000-hectare pilot zone will be established and over 2,000 kilometers of roads will be earmarked in Beijing for testing intelligent connected vehicles.
By mid-October this year, Beijing had opened 44 road sections with a total length of 123 km for automakers to test their autonomous driving technology, according to the white paper.
Chen said the intelligent connected vehicle industry, as a strategic development direction in the new era, is closely related to a wide range of industries. Therefore, its improvement requires joint efforts from all parties.
China’s major internet giants are already embracing the trend and betting big on the promising market.
Chinese search engine giant Baiera du Inc has taken the lead in China to realize fully automatic driving under the mixed road conditions of urban roads, beltways and expressways, and has achieved mass production of the Apolong, China’s first Level 4 fully self-driving mini bus. It plans to ship the buses to Japan early next year.
Baidu has been engaged in the automobile industry since 2013.
“The Apollo project launched by Baidu in 2017 has become the world’s largest intelligent driving environment,” said Robin Li, chairman and CEO of Baidu.
The Apollo intelligent driving system has attracted 129 eco-partners and over 10,000 developers to create products so far. Due to the open platform, many “new species” of autonomous driving have become involved, such as driverless trucks, unmanned delivery vehicles, unmanned sanitation cars and autonomous wheelchairs.
Li said Baidu has pushed forward with a series of initiatives aimed at limiting unintended consequences from artificial intelligence, as the internet giant has taken safety and security as its first principles in the development of autonomous driving.
E-commerce leader Alibaba Group Holding Ltd has been developing its own internet-connected vehicle technology. The technology giant collaborated with SAIC Motor Co and launched the internet-connected model, Roewe RX5, sparking a buying frenzy.
Alibaba said it believes the development of intelligent connected vehicles should not be limited to the product itself, but expand the vision from the car to the road.
“It’s worth thinking about whether smart cars can effectively use road resources,” said Wang Jian, chairman of the Alibaba Group Technical Committee. “The internet should be another form of infrastructure for cars, just as roads are.”
Alibaba’s plans for automatic driving run alongside its vehicleroad synergetic project, which sees autonomous vehicles driving in an information-based environment and obtaining required road environment information from the intelligent transportation system.
Wang said technological progress is closely related to the optimization of urban resources.
“Only when the least physical resources are used to support the development of transportation, the of intelligent connected vehicles will really begin,” he said.
Underpinning that goal is Alibaba’s acceleration into real-world testing of autonomous driving. The company announced in September that its driverless fleet had been granted test license plates by the authorities in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province.
Another internet giant, Tencent Holdings Ltd, is not far behind. Currently, Tencent has signed strategic cooperation agreements with FAW, BMW, GAC, Changan and other automakers. Several models powered by Tencent’s internet of vehicles system, AI in Car, are already on the market.
Pony Ma, chairman and CEO of Tencent, said the company is designing a voice interaction system to help drivers safely send and receive messages, minimizing drivers’ distractions while driving.
“Carmakers are the leaders of the intelligent connected vehicle industry, and Tencent’s position is clearly as an ‘assistant’ to carmakers, which helps the automobile industry achieve transformation and upgrading,” Ma said.
“No automotive enterprise can provide all the resources and capabilities required to produce an intelligent connected vehicle. The future of the automobile industry needs efforts from internet tech giants and traditional carmakers,” he said.
His comments were echoed among major Chinese carmakers.
“Traditional automobile enterprises and internet technology companies are naturally and strongly complementary,” said Xu Heyi, chairman of Beijing Automotive Group Co, or BAIC Group.
BAIC Group unveiled its five-year plan, which aims to equip all of its products with world-leading selfdriving or intelligent connected technologies by 2020.
“BAIC should strengthen its industrial presence in high-performance sensors, controllers, computing platforms, automatic driving systems and high-precision maps,” Xu said.
The group will cooperate with world-leading electronics company Bosch, Chinese tech giant Baidu, Chinese voice technology firm iFlytek Co, and other tech firms to integrate high-quality resources across the globe and to build an open intelligent connected vehicle ecosystem, Xu said.
BAIC is not the first carmaker that has decided to build such an open vehicle ecosystem.
BYD Co Ltd has launched its own car app platform, D++. Using the platform, app developers can gain access to 66 control rights, 341 sensors and extensive vehicle data.
“We are the first car brand to open all sensors and controls,” said Wang Chuanfu, chairman and president of BYD. “It is also the first step in the process of establishing a fully open vehicle ecosystem.”
The platform has already attracted dozens of partners, including Baidu with its self-driving Apollo system, online security company 360 Security Technology Inc, and AI specialist Horizon Robotics Inc.