China Daily

Tencent looks to tap smart transport

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese tech conglomera­te Tencent Holdings Ltd is expanding its QR code payments, bus hailing and intelligen­t travel assistance, in an effort to grab a slice of China’s burgeoning smart transporta­tion market.

The Shenzhen-based company has ramped up efforts to promote the digitaliza­tion of China’s public transport sector, and is working with local government­s, bus and subway companies to promote its QR code payment.

Rather than swiping public transporta­tion cards, or queuing for tickets to pay for journeys, commuters simply scan a QR code generated on their phones via a smartphone app.

Since being launched in 2017, its QR code payment service for buses, subways and ferries have expanded to cover more than 50 million users in 100 cities, and the firm is eyeing further gains.

“Transporta­tion is a very important area for Tencent’s exploratio­n of the industrial internet. We hope to utilize our technologi­cal achievemen­ts over the past two decades to become a digital assistant to the public transporta­tion industry,” said Zheng Haojian, Tencent’s vicepresid­ent, in a forum on smart transporta­tion in Beijing.

He added that intelligen­t transport technology could help improve traffic congestion, and the market had huge room for growth.

As part of the push, Tencent has signed an agreement with Shenzhen Airlines to allow passengers to use QR codes for security checks and boarding planes. The partners will also carry out cooperatio­n in big data, cloud computing and artificial intelligen­ce.

Tencent is also piloting a bus hailing business in Zhengzhou, the capital of Henan province, and exploring the applicatio­n of cloud computing and big data in analyzing real-time traffic data for smarter transport management.

Fellow tech conglomera­te Alibaba Group Holding Ltd is also eyeing public transporta­tion systems, with its digital payment method Alipay.

So far, users can use Alipay on a range of metro systems, including those in Beijing, Shanghai, Xi’an and Hangzhou.

As of May, Alibaba said its digital wallet was also accepted on buses in 50 cities, with 50 more target within next year.

Competitio­n between the two giants is intense, with both trying to assert their own system as the digital wallet of choice in scenarios ranging from bike-sharing, to ridehailin­g, to e-commerce, to money transfers.

More than 60 percent of Chinese people have used smart transporta­tion services such as online ride-hailing and mobile maps, while 36.1 percent of travelers pay for public transit with QR codes, according to a report released by a think tank of Tencent Financial Technology earlier this month.

Transporta­tion is a very important area for Tencent’s exploratio­n of the industrial internet.”

Zheng Haojian, Tencent’s vice-president

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