The Asian Age

Tech firms face rocky road on the way to making cars

- BREE FOWLER GOOGLE APPLE UBER

Silicon Valley may think it can build a better car. But should it?

As tech giants like Google and Apple look to automobile­s as the next frontier for innovation, they face a looming reality: Cars are a lot harder to manufactur­e and sell than smartphone­s.

Industry veterans and critics warn that the auto business is a different animal. It’s fraught with massive costs to erect auto plants, complexiti­es in developing new sales and service systems, and daunting liabilitie­s involved when human lives are at stake.

Automakers recalled a record 64 million vehicles in 2014, shattering the old record of 30.8 million set in 2004.

General Motors Co. has had to pay $ 5.3 billion to cover fines, victim compensati­on and the recall of millions of vehicles for faulty ignition switches. Toyota Motor Corp. paid a $ 1.2 billion fine for failing to report safety defects, and Volkswagen Group has set aside $ 7.3 billion for the potential costs of its emissions scandal.

“I think, like so many Silicon Valley techies, that they believe they are smarter than the world’s automobile business, and that they will do it better,” said Bob Lutz, a retired General Motors vice chairman. “No way.”

He added that tech companies would pay the same high prices for expensive components such as electric car batteries, likely pushing retail prices of their vehicles out of reach for the average driver.

“It will be a huge money loser,” Lutz predicted.

To be sure, Google and Apple have plenty of cash to burn, with about $ 270 billion in the bank combined. But the challenges of the car industry may be steering them to find ways to revolution­ize automotive technology without becoming actual automakers. Mountain View, California- based Alphabet, the new holding company for Google and its affiliated businesses, has spent six years working on cars that can drive without human assistance. But the company says it doesn’t want the responsibi­lity of building the robotic vehicles.

Instead, it plans to make the self- driving system available to automakers that already have factories, dealership­s and experience.

“We have enormous respect for the expertise of the automotive industry and how big and complex a job it is to manufactur­e a vehicle,” company spokeswoma­n Courtney Hohne said. “We’ll partner with many different companies to bring this technology into the world safely.”

The strategy is consistent with how Google currently operates. It relies on other companies to produce the devices powered by its software. Most smartphone­s, for example, operate on its Android software. But the company doesn’t make any of the devices.

If its self- driving system makes it to market, the company could license the software for a fee or, perhaps, making it free to use like Android.

That’s because it makes most of its money from ads within their popular online services. If they no longer need to drive, people might spend time in their cars watching videos on Google- owned YouTube or seeking informatio­n on Google’s search engine — both of which show ads.

But licensing their technology won’t insulate it from safety issues. The company potentiall­y could be held liable if one of its self- driving cars goes awry and injures or kills people in an accident. Apple CEO Tim Cook told an audience this week that the automotive industry is ripe for “massive change,” with new software, electric motors and self- driving capability becoming “much more important, in a huge way.” But Cook avoided commenting on reports that Apple may be building its own car, according to a video recording of his remarks Monday at a technology conference sponsored by The Wall Street Journal.

“What we really want, hopefully in the short term, is we’d like people as they enter their car to be able to have an iPhone experience in their car,” he said.

Apple has developed software for automakers called Car Play, which lets drivers use an iPhone and its voice- activated assistant Siri to operate some electronic controls and entertainm­ent systems.

In a research note, UBS analyst Steven Milunovich cites the $ 2 trillion auto industry as a potential new opportunit­y at a time when sales of smartphone­s, tablets and PCs are seeing slower growth globally.

Milunovich noted, however, that cars have significan­tly lower profit margins than i Phones.

Apple, which makes most of its money from i Phones, reported $ 39.5 billion in net income for its last fiscal year, on total sales of $ 182.8 billion. GM reported only about $ 4 billion in profit for its last fiscal year, on sales of $ 151.1 billion.

Apple outsources manufactur­ing to contractor­s in Asia. That may be more difficult to do with cars, said Jack Nerad, an analyst at Kelley Blue Book’s KBB. com.

While an iPhone is complex, with about 1,700 components in an iPhone 6 Plus, it pales in comparison to a vehicle, which has some 10,000 parts.

Sergio Marchionne, CEO of Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s, sees a car in Apple’s future, though he doubts they’ll attempt to manufactur­e it themselves. He welcomes the competitio­n.

“I think that this industry in general needs to open up to disrupters,” Marchionne said in an interview on CNBC Wednesday. “Whether it’s the Google car or the Apple car... it’s going to change the traditiona­l nature of car- making.” Self- driving technology has also piqued the interest of Uber, the fast- growing Silicon Valley startup that operates a ride- hailing service in cities around the world. Uber said earlier this year that it was partnering with Carnegie Mellon University to research and develop new technologi­es for mapping, vehicle safety and autonomous driving.

The company hasn’t said whether it hopes to use autonomous technology to replace its thousands of drivers, who work as contractor­s driving their own cars.

But CEO Travis Kalanick has suggested Uber could someday expand with the help of self- driving vehicles, and touted the technology’s promise for improving safety and easing traffic congestion.

 ?? — AFP ?? Japan’s Tokai University Solar Team car takes part in the 2015 World Solar Challenge in Adelaide on Thursday. Many solar cars from 25 different countries participat­ed in the 3,000- km race from Darwin to Adelaide.
— AFP Japan’s Tokai University Solar Team car takes part in the 2015 World Solar Challenge in Adelaide on Thursday. Many solar cars from 25 different countries participat­ed in the 3,000- km race from Darwin to Adelaide.

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