Global Times - Weekend

Nio, Intel unit to cooperate on autonomous passenger vehicles

- Reuters – Global Times Page Editor: zhanghongp­ei @globaltime­s.com.cn

Chinese electric car start-up Nio Inc and Intel Corp’s selfdrivin­g car technology firm Mobileye on Tuesday said they would work together to develop autonomous vehicles for the consumer market in China and eventually other countries.

Under the agreement, Nio will manufactur­e and mass produce a self-driving system designed by Mobileye, which will be integrated into Nio’s electric vehicle consumer lines, as well as Mobileye’s driverless ride-hailing services.

The self-driving kit provided by Israel-based Mobileye includes the vision processing chip, camera, radar and lidar sensors, as well as safety and mapping software.

Nio will also develop a version of self-driving electric vehicles that Mobileye will deploy as robot axis for ride-hailing services in global markets.

No financial details of the partnershi­p were disclosed.

The companies plan an initial release in China beginning in 2022, Mobileye President and Chief Executive Officer Amnon Shashua told Reuters in an interview.

“The deal with Nio will also enable us to harvest data in compliance with Chinese regulation­s and improve mapping to support autonomous driving,” Shashua said.

The Mobileye CEO added that a rollout in China was more efficient as the regulatory environmen­t was centralize­d and the Chinese government was working on standardiz­ing Mobileye’s safety model for self-driving cars into law.

Manufactur­ers and suppliers are increasing­ly skeptical about the speed of adoption of fully automated self-driving systems, because of their high cost, complexity and regulation.

In the meantime, they have begun focusing on deploying more advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS), which share components, but cost much less and can generate revenue to help defray the cost of developing full self-driving systems.

Mobileye said it powers ADAS in car models of more than 27 automakers.

Loss-making and cash-burning Nio is the most prominent among dozens of Chinese electric-vehicle start-ups vying to become the next Tesla. All are hampered by dwindling demand in the world’s largest car market, reduced government subsidies and nagging concerns over the trade war.

Nio said the partnershi­p with Mobileye aligned with its mission to provide premium, smart electric cars and allowed it to maintain an edge over electric vehicle competitor­s.

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