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Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing expands to smaller cities in Australia as part of global push

  • Since entering the Australian market in May 2018, the platform has been available in eight cities including Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth and Sydney
  • Globalisation is one of Didi’s core strategies after the company became the top player in the saturated mainland Chinese market

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A woman walks her dog in Canberra, May 17, 2020. The Australian capital is one of the new cities Didi Chuxing will operate in starting August 10. Photo: Xinhua

Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing says it plans to expand its operations to smaller cities and towns in Australia, reaching 3 million more people, in the latest move by the company to push its global expansion.

Starting August 10, Didi’s Express service will be available in 20 new regional cities and towns including the country’s capital Canberra and Adelaide in South Australia, while its 7-seater Max service will initially be available in Adelaide, according to a company statement on Tuesday.

Since entering the Australian market in May 2018, the platform has been available in eight cities including the country’s four largest – Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth and Sydney. Operating locally through its wholly-owned subsidiary, it has around 75,000 regular drivers and 1.5 million active passengers in the country.

Globalisation is one of Didi’s core strategies after the company became the top player in the saturated mainland Chinese market. Since pushing Uber out of China four years ago, Didi has been on an acquisition spree around the world, investing in Grab and Ola in Asia, Lyft in the US, 99 in Brazil, Taxify in Europe and Careem in Dubai.

The company now operates in eight overseas markets outside China including Brazil, Mexico, Australia, Japan, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica and Panama, covering more than 260 major cities globally. By the beginning of this year, Didi had delivered more than 1 billion trips in its international markets, the company said.

While Didi is accelerating its international development, the platform is expanding its scope of operations and diversifying its business, according to a Didi spokeswoman. Amid the global coronavirus pandemic when international transport ground to a virtual standstill and Didi’s core ride-hailing business was hit hard, the company started to offer services such as on-demand delivery and food delivery. Now Didi offers food delivery services in Brazil, Mexico and Japan.

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