China

Baidu Pushes to Put Driverless Taxis on China's Roads, Pledging to Build 1,000 in 3 Years

He Luqi | Qianlong.com | Visual China Group | Getty Images
  • Baidu has partnered with state-owned automaker BAIC Group to build 1,000 driverless cars over the next three years.
  • Baidu has been testing robotaxis in a number of major cities across China including Shanghai, but the new partnership is an attempt to commercialize autonomous taxis on a mass scale.
  • This will pit the company against ride-hailing giant Didi, which is racing toward an initial public offering in the U.S. and is also developing its own robotaxis.

GUANGZHOU, China — Baidu has partnered with state-owned automaker BAIC Group to build 1,000 driverless cars over the next three years and eventually commercialize a robotaxi service across China.

The Apollo Moon cars will be manufactured under BAIC's ARCFOX electric vehicle brand while Baidu will provide the autonomous driving systems and software.

The companies said each vehicle can be manufactured at 480,000 yuan ($74,729) each, versus the average of a 1 million yuan for an autonomous car, thanks to the maturation in technology and mass production capabilities.

Apollo Moon has a projected operating cycle of over five years. It's unclear when production will begin, when they will be rolled out and whether Baidu, which will operate the robotaxi fleet, will charge passengers to use the service.

Analysts see Baidu's foray into autonomous cars over the past few year as a future growth driver for the company as it looks to diversify its revenue away from advertising. The Chinese internet giant has developed a self-driving software and hardware system called Apollo which it looks to sell to other automakers.

But robotaxis could offer another revenue stream if they are commercialized successfully.

Baidu has been testing robotaxis in a number of major cities across China including Shanghai. In Beijing, Baidu has started charging passengers for rides in its driverless cars around Shougang Park, one of the sites for the Winter Olympics in 2022.

With the BAIC partnership, Baidu will be hoping to take robotaxis beyond just the testing phase and to a mass-market rollout of a service.

This will pit the company against ride-hailing giant Didi, which is racing toward an initial public offering in the U.S. and is also developing its own robotaxis.

Baidu is also facing competition from a number of start-ups in China including WeRide and Pony.ai, both of which are testing their own fleet of autonomous taxis in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou.

Baidu has been aggressively expanding partnerships with established automakers. Earlier this year, it set up a standalone electric car company in partnership with Chinese carmaker Geely.

Copyright CNBC
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