Industry dynamics

Internet firms zoom into smart vehicle market

Publishtime:1970-01-01 08:00:00 Views:19
People gather at the stand of Chinese electric vehicle startup Nio, as it unveils its ES8 SUV.[Photo provided to China Daily]

SHANGHAI-Chinese internet firms are racing to launch car models with smart functions and are installing charging posts to make their cars run further.

Shanghai-based smart car developer NIO, considered by some to be "China's Tesla" and launched its NIO ES8 electric SUV model last Sunday.

The standard version of the ES8 is priced at 448,000 yuan ($69,404).

With subsidies, the ES8 is sold at 370,000 yuan, compared to the Tesla Model S-sold at 700,000 yuan with subsidies in the Chinese market.

The car boasts outstanding self-driving technology.

NIO Pilot, its automated piloting system, is internet-connected and equipped with 23 sensors.

Company founder and CEO Li Bin said the car is capable of producing a playlist of music by analyzing users' records. It can automatically shut car windows in case of rain, take a selfie for the driver, and turn on air purification based on weather conditions.

Delivery to customers is expected to begin after the model completes a 3-million-kilometer road test in the first half of next year.

Li said the company plans to build 1,100 battery-swap stations nationwide by 2020. Each station covers the space of three parking lots. It can swap electric vehicle batteries in just three minutes.

Drivers in China's first-tier cities will be able to find a battery-swap station within 3 km, Li said.

Less than one-third of Chinese urban households can install electric car chargers at home due to the lack of family-owed parking spaces.

Li said the company plans to work with the State Power Grid to link its chargers with the power network along highways, so that recharging electric vehicles is more convenient than filling up at gas stations.

Always-on, another new smart car developer, launched its SUV EX5 model in Shanghai last week. It focuses on smart driving. Priced at 200,000 yuan, the car will be available to customers in the second half of 2018. Chinese consumers have already been able to buy the EV 10, an electric car produced by Chinese Internet firm Deercc.

The company hopes to sell 2,000 EV10 cars this year.

The model is priced between 59,800 yuan to 67,800 yuan with subsidies.

Chinese internet giant Alibaba has teamed up with car manufacturer SAIC to set up Banma (Zebra in English), to develop China's first internet car, the RX5.

The upgraded model, available in October, serves as a smart terminal allowing drivers to surf the internet free while offering a number of user-friendly remote-control functions.