Global Times

Ctrip journeys into on-demand car services

Competitio­n by newcomers will shape sector

- By Huang Ge

Leading domestic online travel agency Ctrip announced on Tuesday that its online ridehailin­g services obtained a license from local transport authoritie­s.

On March 28, the Tianjin Municipal Transporta­tion Commission, representi­ng the Ministry of Transport, issued the online car-hailing license to Ctrip’s car-on-demand services, according to a press release that Ctrip sent to the Global Times on Tuesday.

The license will make Ctrip’s online ondemand car services legal and available across the country.

Ctrip began to set up its car-on-demand platform in 2015 and after accumulati­ng three years of experience, the platform has unveiled its own car-on-demand services, read the press release.

China’s online car-hailing market is very large and the industry’s outlook is sound, Li Qiao, CEO of Ctrip’s domestic car-on-demand business department, was quoted as saying in the press release.

“But it’s a new era of competing in terms of services, not subsidies,” and Ctrip will refer to online car-hailing rules of various cities in China and use the strictest one as the basis to offer high-quality online ride-hailing service for users, Li said.

“Ctrip aims to create a complete business ecosystem by launching its own on-demand car services,” Men Changhui, senior analyst of Beijing-based internet firm InnoTREE Co, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

Ctrip will not only focus on its online travel service, but hopes to further connect its online service with offline business, such as providing car services for travelers, Men

“It’s a new era of competing in terms of services, not subsidies.” Li Qiao, CEO of Ctrip’s car-on-demand department

noted.

“With an increasing number of firms’ recent launch of online car-hailing service such as Meituan-Dianping, a new round of competitio­n in the sector is likely to develop in 2018,” noted Zhao Xiang, an industry analyst at Beijing-based research firm Analysys.

Food delivery company Meituan-Dianping launched on-demand car service in Shanghai on March 21, and in its first seven days provided 2.2 million rides, news site tech.sina.com.cn reported on Monday.

Also, online mapping services provider amap.com launched car-pooling business in Beijing on March 26 by starting the process of hiring drivers, according to media reports. The platform plans to expand the business to Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen, both in South China’s Guangdong Province, as well as other Chinese cities.

“China’s online car-hailing service has long been dominated by Didi Chuxing and newcomers may offer more choices for consumers and encourage domestic providers to give better service,” a 20-something resident in Beijing surnamed Wang told the Global Times on Tuesday.

“Although I don’t know much about Ctrip’s online car-hailing service, I’d like to try it,” Wang said.

Didi Chuxing’s app was downloaded

about 760,000 downloads, CAOCAO, by Beijing-based cording to data which respective­ly, released times had online on 158,200 on and by March the the car-hailing Zhejiang-based same internet 22, and followed day, 53,700 platdidach­uxing.com con acg good for The domination sootoo.com the domestic on of March online Didi isn’t 23. ride-hailing actually costs almost industry, because the same hailing or a sometimes car online even now more than a taxi, Men said. The domestic car-hailing sector will en a new round of competitio­n in 2018 and Didi is unlikely to dominates the market as it did in 2017, Zhao told the Global Times on tuesday. Zhao said that some other small and mesized online car-hailing platforms will gain certain market shares in 2018. Competitio­n will help advance the growth of the sector and most of the competitio­n will be benign, said Men. Transport authoritie­s will also continue to strengthen regulation­s on China’s carg hailing industry, experts said. i and Meituan Dache were each fined 100000 yuan ($15,916) by Shanghai transuthor­ities for illegally providing online ride-hailing services, news site thepaper.cn reported on Tuesday. The Chinese government released regulation­s that aim to regulate the taxi market and car-hailing services on July 28, 2017. Those rules took effect on Nor November 1, 2017. The regulation­s requires that carg platforms, such as Didi ng, must review the qualins of drivers and their cars to guarantee safe

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 ??  ?? A woman uses online ride-hailing service of Ctrip in Beijing on Tuesday.
A woman uses online ride-hailing service of Ctrip in Beijing on Tuesday.

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