Israeli smart mobility startups lure automotive players with technologies
JERUSALEM-Hundreds of Israeli startups showed their best transport technologies in front of buyers and potential partners from the global automobile industry at a major smart mobility event.
The seventh edition of the annual smart transportation event organized by EcoMotion was held in the coastal city of Tel Aviv from Monday to Thursday, attracting over 1,000 senior executives from international companies in the field of transportation and hundreds of vehicle industry leaders.
EcoMotion is a joint venture of the Israeli Innovation Institute, the Alternative Fuels and Smart Transportation Administration and the Ministry of Economy.
On Thursday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met in his office with Ford Motor Company Executive Chairman William Clay Ford who was an honored guest of the EcoMotion week.
"Israel has finally got an automotive industry. We tried, when I was a young officer, we had cars, Israelimade, fiberglass cars," said Netanyahu. "And that's just changing transportation."
Other global companies participating in the conference included Volkswagen, Magna, Harman, Aptiv, Lear, BP Ventures, SNCF, Deloitte, Bosch, Daimler and more.
The event presented the latest technological developments in smart transportation, including an exhibition of some 130 Israeli and international startups.
Also during the EcoMotion Week, Ford opened its Israeli research center aimed at searching for technology partners in connectivity, sensors, in-vehicle monitoring and cybersecurity.
"We recognize the importance of being in one of the world's leading innovation communities and ecosystems," said the Ford chief in a statement released with the inauguration of the new innovation lab.
The Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi Alliance also launched an innovation lab in Tel Aviv, with the same focus and purpose as Ford, along with other global carmakers.
The new lab will work in partnership with the Israel Innovation Authority that sponsors various hightech labs around the country.
Groupe Renault, Nissan Motor Company and Mitsubishi Motors represent the world's largest automotive alliance.
They have strategic collaborations with other automotive groups, including Germany's Daimler and China's Dongfeng.
Senior Vice-President of Nissan Motor Company Takao Asami told Xinhua they are here to scout new technology.
"We are looking for new technologies that we don't have, and Israel is one of the most advanced countries in cybersecurity, IT and sensing technologies. That is why we are here," said Asami.
Asami believes the new technologies which are promoted by the Israeli government could help his company "change the ways in which customers use the vehicles, the cities are designed and the automotive business is conducted."
Although driverless vehicles are already running on streets in some regions, "it will take five or 10 years, even decades" until fully autonomous vehicles are perfect in their function, according to Asami.
About the security and safety of autonomous cars, Asami said: "Zero fatality is the first target, and zero accidents are the second target. We have no choice but to try to achieve it."
At the main event, Ford expressed his admiration to the Israeli startup industry, as the companies "spark innovation".
Israeli workplaces, especially in the high-tech industry, usually do not have strict rules, so every worker could act as a manager, and to push his ideas directly to the CEO and the owner of the company.
The open-minded workplace atmosphere in Israel is a great fertile ground for out-of-box ideas to come up all the time.
Israel made a strategic decision years ago to become a world leader in the future automobile industry, partially because it needs an energy alternative to oil for future transport.
Naama Kaufman Fass, deputy director-general at the Israeli Ministry of Economy and Industry, said in an interview with Xinhua that she expects the number of participants at the conference to double next year.
Fass added that the Israeli government, especially the Ministry of Economy and the prime minister, supports the smart mobility industry and wants to evolve it.
Among exhibitors was Russian internet search company Yandex, which demonstrated its autonomous car technology.
The company's autos are already in use on the streets of Las Vegas in the United States, Moscow and will now be tested in Tel Aviv.
Also on display was a prototype design of a flying car by Israel-based NFT, whose electric aircraft can lift off and land vertically. It can drive like a car and fly like a plane.