Autonomous vehicles that pass road testing and
safety assessments will be allowed to apply for road trials, the Beijing Daily newspaper
reported, which said the new regulations take effect from April 1
China's capital Beijing passed new regulations on
Tuesday (December 31, 2024) to encourage autonomous driving technology in the
city, with authorities planning to eventually allow driverless public buses and
taxis.
Autonomous
vehicles that pass road testing and safety assessments will be allowed to apply
for road trials, the state-backed Beijing Daily newspaper
reported, which said the new regulations take effect from April 1. The city supports the use of
autonomous vehicles for private cars, urban buses, trams and taxis, it said,
adding that it wants to encourage the construction of intelligent road
infrastructure to support such transport.
In a separate notice published
on Monday, the central Chinese city of Wuhan also said it had approved
regulations to promote the development of intelligent connected vehicles. Chinese authorities have been aggressively
greenlighting trials for self-driving technology with at least 19 cities conducting
robotaxi and robobus tests, Reuters reported in August.
Companies with large robotaxi
fleets in use in China include Apollo Go, a subsidiary of technology giant
Baidu, which plans to deploy 1,000 robotaxis in Wuhan by end-2024.Pony.ai,
which floated in the U.S. market in November, plans to expand its robotaxi
fleet nationwide to over 1,000 by 2026 from 250 this year. Other firms exploring robotaxi opportunities in the world's largest
auto market include WeRide, AutoX and SAIC Motor.
U.S. EV giant Tesla also aims
to bring full self-driving (FSD) to China in the first quarter of 2025, pending
regulatory approval, and has said it will start producing its own robotaxi in
2026.