Ford, Baidu set to test self-driving cars on Beijing’s roads
Trials are slated to begin by end of this year.
- by
- Zoey Chong
Beijing will soon see another non-Chinese self-driving car on its roads.
Ford is beginning a two-year initiative with Chinese internet giant Baidu
to develop and test self-driving vehicles designed to meet Level 4
driving automation standards established by SAE International in China,
the US automaker said in a statement today.
This means the
vehicles involved in the trials should be capable of operating
autonomously "within a specific geographic area and under certain
weather conditions" upon completion, according to Ford. The cars are
equipped with Baidu's Apollo virtual driver system and were converted by a team of Ford engineers.
The tests will run on open roads designated for autonomous
vehicle trials in Beijing and could possibly be extended to other
Chinese cities in future in accordance with local regulations, Ford
added in its statement.
Baidu is still in the process of acquiring
the licenses for this project, but on-road testing is slated to begin
by end of this year, a Ford spokesperson told CNET in an email.
The news come after Daimler became the first foreign automaker to receive permission to test Level 4 self-driving cars on-road in Beijing in July. It also follows Baidu's recent addition as the first Chinese company to the Partnership on AI, a US group whose work focuses on the ethics and best practices on AI.

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