South China Morning Post

Lidar sensor maker focuses on Europe

- Daniel Ren ren.wei@scmp.com

Hesai Group, one of the world’s top makers of lidar sensors used in smart cars, has set its sights on Europe, buoyed by its efforts to make the components more affordable to customers.

The Shanghai-based company is seriously considerin­g building plants outside mainland China to capitalise on the accelerati­ng transition in the global auto sector, co-founder and CEO David Li Yifan said.

“In the long term, we plan to undertake more developmen­t outside China, mostly in Europe,” he said, without disclosing details.

Hesai counts among its clients Li Auto, China’s largest domestic maker of premium electric cars, and Geely, owner of Volvo Cars.

Currently, six out of every 10 new electric vehicles (EVs) worldwide are sold in mainland China, where industry officials view lidar as an essential component in developing autonomous vehicles. Lidar uses laser beams to measure distance and generate accurate maps of objects around cars.

On Friday, Hesai released products based on its ATX technology, which can effectivel­y enhance advanced driver assistance systems with a longer detection range, higher resolution and wider field of view.

ATX can identify conditions such as rain, fog and exhaust fumes, filtering out more than 99 per cent of environmen­tal noise, according to Hesai.

“We are confident ATX will have a great impact on the adoption of lidar given its versatilit­y,” Li said. “We have always been keen on designing and building our products for the global market.”

Hesai would make lidar as affordable as possible, he added.

Dismissed by Tesla’s Elon Musk in 2019 as a “fool’s errand” because of the high cost of production, lidar has boomed, with the market growing since Chinese EV maker Xpeng produced the world’s first lidarguide­d smart vehicle in late 2021.

The cost of lidar sensors has dropped from thousands of dollars over the past few years to several hundred dollars, according to Li. “We are going in a direction where lidars will be used in every passenger vehicle.”

Some 440,000 EVs priced above 150,000 yuan (HK$162,000) in mainland China last year came fitted with lidar sensors, representi­ng 10.4 per cent of the total, according to Shenzhen-based Gaogong Intelligen­t Vehicle Research Institute.

The penetratio­n rate is expected to jump to 16 per cent this year, which could translate to about 1 million units, the institute said.

“The rising demand for lidar sensors will result in lower prices because production costs can be lowered amid increasing output,” said Chen Jinzhu, CEO of consultanc­y Shanghai Mingliang Auto Service. “Top players will benefit most from the wider use of lidars.”

Hesai, which raised US$190 million via a Nasdaq listing in February 2023, reported a net loss of 476 million yuan last year, up 58 per cent from 2022.

Revenue climbed 56.1 per cent year on year to 1.9 billion yuan while deliveries surged 176.1 per cent to 222,116 units.

For Chinese EV assemblers and supply-chain vendors, localising production in developed markets such as Europe is also seen as an effective way to dodge potentiall­y higher tariffs.

Last September, the European Commission launched an investigat­ion into foreign state subsidies, and is expected to impose tariffs higher than the standard rate of 10 per cent on Chinese-made EVs.

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