SMART ROAD SOLUTION
Huawei develops a full array of sensors to talk to driverless vehicles.
The abstract concept of connected vehicles becomes easier to grasp when one visits a test site in eastern China.
On a four-kilometre road in the city of Wuxi in Jiangsu province, a self-driving bus travels back and forth, making stops, swerving past obstacles, accelerating and decelerating, based on information it constantly receives from its surroundings.
Embedded in the road, traffic lights, street signs and other infrastructure are sensors, cameras and radars that talk with the vehicle.
The site, used by the telecom equipment giant Huawei Technologies and its partners, is part of China’s first national project for intelligent and connected vehicles. The country wants to make traffic smoother and safer, while ensuring local champions like Huawei benefit from the enormous opportunity of supplying the infrastructure.
“Autonomous driving is an irresistible trend, but any isolated vehicle alone can’t nail it,” said Jiang Wangcheng, a president at Huawei’s information and communications technology business. “The only solution is to get more information from the roads.”
Codenamed X-Bus, the vehicle is linked to a transport-control network that sees and decides everything that happens on the test road. The communication is two-way: the bus constantly sends information to the network and can make requests such as favourable traffic lights to help it stay on schedule.
Though the bus is largely autonomous, a “human safety” driver sits behind the wheel and is ready to take control if needed.
Shenzhen-based Huawei, with its main network business facing global pressure after the US designated it a threat to national security, is targeting new growth areas such as transport. Instead of making a smart car of its own
— billionaire founder Ren Zhengfei and other top executives have said that isn’t the intention — Huawei wants to provide the communications equipment and software required for an intelligent-vehicle revolution.
While wide-scale use of such systems is still years away, technology companies around the globe are making progress. Zoox, backed by Amazon. com, won approval in September to test autonomous cars on public roads without a safety driver.
News that Apple was considering putting a self-driving car on the road by 2024 sent its shares near record highs last month. Self-driving cars developed by the Google parent Alphabet have been roaming on American roads for years.
In China, autonomous cars from the search-engine giant Baidu can be seen driving on the roads of Beijing suburbs. Chip startups such as Horizon Robotics and Shanghai Westwell Lab
Information Technology Co are testing auto-driving technologies with the help of AI processors and algorithms.
China, the world’s biggest car market, wants smart vehicles with at least some automation to account for more than 50% of new auto sales by 2025, according to a national technology road map laid out in November. The plan also emphasised the need for infrastructure that allows vehicles to link to the internet and each other.
Increased safety is a focus — currently one person is killed in a traffic accident in China every eight minutes. Huawei’s aim is for its technology to provide more accurate, real-time information to vehicles, drivers, pedestrians and other road users about traffic, weather conditions and potential hazards.
“Roads are supposed to serve the vehicles that run on them,” Huawei’s Jiang said. “They need to provide more information to offer better support.”
“Roads are supposed to serve the vehicles that run on them. They need to provide more information to offer better support”
JIANG WANGCHENG Huawei Technologies