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The number of registered new energy vehicles (NEVs) in China was 4.92 million by the end of 2020, an increase of nearly 30 percent year on year, statistics by the Ministry of Public Security showed Friday.

China saw robust growth in the number of registered NEVs, with more than 1 million additions in each of the past three years.

NEVs currently account for 1.75 percent of China's registered automobiles that number 281 million. Of the NEVs, 81.32 percent are pure electric vehicles.

The number of Chinese cities with more than 1 million registered automobiles increased by four to 70 in 2020, according to the ministry.

 
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Geely's Flying Car Prepares to Land in US Next Year
LIAO SHUMIN
DATE : DEC 17 2018/SOURCE : YICAI

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Geely's Flying Car Prepares to Land in US Next Year

(Yicai Global) Dec. 17 -- Chinese carmaker Geely Holding Group has revealed plans to launch its first flying car in the US next year through unit Terrafugia and has started accepting pre-orders.

Terrafugia has already successfully tested several prototype models, Hong Kong newspaper Ta Kung Pao reported Geely Senior Manager for Media Relations Gao Po as saying, adding that the Massachusetts-based unit aims to debut the world's first vertical take-off and landing flying car in 2023.

The subsidiary aims to achieve annual sales of 3 million vehicles by 2020, the report said, adding that a time frame for a China launch is still in the works.

The two-seater model named Transition uses a folding wing to switch between ground driving and air flight modes in less than one minute. A four-cylinder turbocharged petrol engine provides a 640-kilometer range and a top speed of 160 kilometers per hour. Transition requires a take-off distance of 425 meters.

The development of Transition has been a joint effort between personnel in the US and China, Gao added.

Founded in 2006 by five Massachusetts Institute of Technology graduates, Terrafugia was acquired by Geely in November last year.
Yicai Global 第一财经 @yicaichina
China state-affiliated media

Transition (TF-1), @GeelyGlobal's flying car, has been granted permission to take to the skies by the US Federal Aviation Administration, the Chinese automaker said today. It is the FAA's first airworthiness certificate for a hybrid car/plane.

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7:44 PM · Jan 22, 2021
 
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China's first autonomous bus line debuts
By TAN YINGZI and DENG RUI in Chongqing | China Daily | Updated: 2021-04-16 09:10

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Passengers board an autonomous bus in Chongqing. [Photo by WANG QUANCHAO/XINHUA]

China's first autonomous bus line started commercial operations in Yongchuan district of Chongqing on Monday with passengers boarding a red Baidu Robobus bus for city trips.

"I did not expect the bus to run so smoothly. There was no shaking or any sudden braking," a middle-aged woman passenger told Chongqing Morning Post. "The seats are very comfortable and I will certainly take the bus again."

Robobus, developed by Chinese tech giant Baidu, is a Level-4 autonomous driving bus. It is 5.9 meters long and can carry 19 passengers at a cruise speed of 40 to 60 kilometers per hour. Level-4 autonomy means that the vehicle can drive autonomously in most conditions without a human driver.

Baidu is using three buses for trips on the 10-km two-way bus route, which has four stops. The interior of the bus is similar to normal ones and passengers can use their bus cards as well. A safety monitor is present in the driver's seat for use in case of emergency, but the actual driving is done by the artificial intelligence system.

"The launch of China's first autonomous bus line marks a major breakthrough in the commercialization of autonomous driving technology in the country," said Li Zhenyu, corporate vice-president of Baidu and general manager of the company's intelligent driving group.

In 2019, Yongchuan, a key connecting point in Chengdu and Chongqing Economic Circle, built the Western China Autonomous Driving Open Test Base with Baidu.

Baidu has been investing in autonomous driving since 2013. Its Apollo is the world's leading open platform for autonomous driving, with more than 210 partners, 55,000 global developers and 700,000 lines of open-source code. The tech giant is also one of several Chinese technology companies that have launched autonomous taxi services for the public.

"The Robobus line will cover all of the district in the future and Yongchuan will become a national model for demonstration and application of autonomous driving," said Teng Hongwei, Party secretary of Yongchuan district.

The district will look to team up with leading AI companies for smart transport and medical pilot projects, Teng said.

As a driverless bus for open road operations, Robobus can easily cope with the bus station scenes and the complex urban road conditions, and fully meet the needs for normal public transport operations, according to Xiong Zupin, Chongqing manager of the company's intelligent driving group.

Passengers can also book a ride on the Robobus through mobile phone applications such as Apollo Go, Baidu Map and Yongchuan Public Service.
As the gateway to Southwest China and a major industrial base, Chongqing boasts one of the world's largest IT industrial clusters and one of the largest auto manufacturing bases in the country. It aims to build itself into a renowned smart city and a smart manufacturing powerhouse.

According to consulting firm McKinsey, China has the potential to become the world's largest market for autonomous vehicles. McKinsey estimates that autonomous driving vehicles will account for more than 40 percent of the new vehicle sales in the world's largest auto market by 2040.
 
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