Chinese autonomous driving firm WeRide to expand services, as sector eyes commercialisation
- ‘All we have achieved is aimed at covering urban centre areas one day’: CEO
- Company has expanded its road tests to Guangzhou’s commercial and business districts
Chinese autonomous driving start-up WeRide said on Wednesday that it aims to expand its services in the central areas of cities, as the sector eyes commercialisation.
“All we have achieved is aimed at covering urban centre areas one day,” said Tony Han, WeRide’s chief executive. The company will initially target Guangzhou, but its services were currently stretched thin because of a limited number of vehicles. “We are working to add more autonomous vehicles to our fleet, and hope this soon covers core urban areas in Guangzhou,” he added.
WeRide’s ambitious goal is emblematic of China’s larger drive to make roads and vehicles smarter and interconnected, to increase transport efficiency in the world’s largest automobile market.
The development of autonomous driving is a top priority for Beijing, and the country’s technology giants are moving in despite the fact that fully autonomous cars are still years away.
Following the roll-out of its robotaxis in Beijing’s suburbs in September, Baidu Apollo, the autonomous driving unit of internet giant Baidu, has teamed up with carmaker Zhejiang Geely Holding Group to produce smart electric vehicles. The loss-making unit has been struggling to find ways to monetise its technologies.
AutoX, a Shenzhen-based autonomous driving start-up backed by Alibaba Group Holding, this newspaper’s parent company, said last week it had started trials of fully driverless robotaxis in a district in Shenzhen, a move that runs afoul of regulations set by China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.
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Elsewhere, Didi Chuxing, the country’s largest ride hailing platform, secured US$300 million in VC funding last month to boost its research and development of self-driving technologies. Also last month, Uisee Technology, a Beijing-based company, closed a funding round of more than 1 billion yuan (US$150 million). It received backing from the National Manufacturing Transformation and Upgrade Fund, a US$21 billion state-backed fund created to upgrade China’s manufacturing capabilities, as well.
Pony.ai, which was founded by ex-Baidu autonomous driving engineers and is backed by Toyota Motor Corporation, received the go-ahead to test its self-driving trucks in Guangzhou in December.