China's BYD beefs up autonomous driving credentials with new unit,
hiring spree
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[May 17, 2023] SHANGHAI/BEIJING
(Reuters) - BYD Co Ltd may be China's biggest electric vehicle maker by
a country mile but it knows it lags rivals in autonomous driving, and
has set up a new division and embarked on a huge hiring spree to rectify
that shortcoming.
Between 4,000 and 5,000 software engineers have been hired recently, BYD
senior vice president Stella Li told an investor forum this month when
quizzed why the automaker was behind in automation and intelligence
technologies.
"We are not ahead of others but we will come up with various types of
innovation in two to three years," she said according to a transcript
that was confirmed as accurate by the company.
Current BYD recruiting advertisements for engineers specialising in
autonomous driving that target top Chinese universities such as Zhejiang
University, indicate that the hiring is ongoing.
BYD set up an intelligent driving research division in Shanghai last
year, according to three sources with direct knowledge of the matter.
Previously, engineers working on autonomous driving had been scattered
across various parts of the company and the new division will bring more
focus to BYD's efforts in high-level automated driving technologies,
they said.
The sources were not authorised to speak to media and declined to be
identified. The automaker, which is 9.87% owned by Warren Buffett's
Berkshire Hathaway Inc and had some 660,000 employees as of April,
declined to elaborate on its autonomous driving strategy.
BYD sold some 510,000 pure electric and plug-in hybrid cars in China
during the first quarter, accounting for nearly 40% of sales of such
vehicles and nearly four times more than Tesla Inc.
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The logo of BYD is pictured at the 2022
Paris Auto Show in Paris, France October 17, 2022. REUTERS/Stephane
Mahe/File Photo
Most of its cars are currently equipped with Advanced Driver
Assistance Systems (ADAS) developed by Bosch.
By comparison, rivals like Tesla, Xpeng, Nio and Li Auto have
developed their own automated driving features that are more
advanced and can, for example, allow drivers to cede control of the
car when on highways.
BYD has also this year teamed up with autonomous driving chip
technology firms Nvidia and Horizon Robotics, saying it wanted to
develop more intelligent vehicles.
Nvidia's Orin, one of the world's most powerful autonomous driving
computing platforms, will be used in its next-generation Dynasty and
Ocean series of cars, the companies said.
Both are high-volume models and further advances in BYD autonomous
driving features would popularise the technology within China.
Horizon Robotics' Journey 5, a lower-cost alternative to Orin, will
be used in BYD's Han sedans in the second half of this year,
according to one of the three sources.
That will help equip the model with new features that are on par
with Tesla's Navigate on Autopilot, the source added.
Founded just 28 years ago in southern China, BYD has outdone rivals
in electric vehicles by employing a high level of vertical
integration, developing and manufacturing batteries and other key
components on its own.
(Reporting by Zhang Yan, Sophie Yu, Zhuzhu Cui and Brenda Goh;
Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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