Published
By (Bloomberg)
The road to China’s
autonomous-driving future is paved with solar panels, mapping sensors and
electric-battery rechargers as the nation tests an “intelligent highway” that
could speed the transformation of the global transportation industry.
The technologies will
be embedded underneath transparent concrete used to build a 1,080-meter-long
(3,540-foot-long) stretch of road in the eastern city of Jinan. About 45,000
vehicles barrel over the section every day, and the solar panels inside
generate enough electricity to power highway lights and 800 homes, according to
builder Qilu Transportation Development Group Co.
Yet Qilu Transportation
wants to do more than supply juice to the grid: it wants the road to be just as
smart as the vehicles of the future. The government says 10 percent of all cars
should be fully self-driving by 2030, and Qilu considers that an opportunity to
deliver better traffic updates, more accurate mapping and on-the-go recharging
of electric-vehicle batteries — all from the ground up.
“The highways we have
been using can only carry vehicles passing by, and they are like the
1.0-generation product,” said Zhou Yong, the company’s general manager. “We’re
working on the 2.0 and 3.0 generations by transplanting brains and a nervous
system.”
The construction comes
as President Xi Jinping’s government pushes ahead with a “Made in China 2025”
plan to help the nation become an advanced manufacturing power and not just a
supplier of sneakers, clothes and toys for export. The 10 sectors highlighted
include new-energy vehicles, information technology and robotics.
China also has a
separate plan for developing its artificial-intelligence industry that calls
for the nation to be the world’s primary AI innovation center by 2030.
Part of that effort
involves building what the government calls an intelligent transportation
system. Coordinating the development of autonomous-driving cars and
intelligent-road systems is a focus, said Yuan Peng, the deputy head of the
transportation ministry’s science and technology department.
“The ministry will help
offer smart roads for the smart cars that are coming,” Yuan said.
Step one makes up a section
of the expressway surrounding Jinan, an old industrial hub of about 7 million
people that’s home to China National Heavy Duty Truck Group, which is also
known as Sinotruk and includes Volkswagen AG’s MAN SE as a minority
shareholder. Zhejiang Geely Holding Group also has a plant there making Geely
brand cars.
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