自動駕駛班車的中國市場(2022年~2023年)
市場調查報告書
商品編碼
1220874

自動駕駛班車的中國市場(2022年~2023年)

China Autonomous Shuttle Market Report, 2022-2023

出版日期: | 出版商: ResearchInChina | 英文 175 Pages | 商品交期: 最快1-2個工作天內

價格
簡介目錄

本報告提供中國的自動駕駛班車市場相關調查分析,產業的概要與現狀,產業的政策,企業和系統廠商的簡介等資訊。

目錄

第1章 自動駕駛班車產業的概要與現狀

  • 自動駕駛班車定義
  • 自動駕駛班車系統的結構
  • 自動駕駛班車運行模式
  • 主要的自動駕駛班車企業的用途情境的比較 - 小型公共汽車
  • 主要的自動駕駛班車企業的用途情境的比較 - 機器人巴士
  • 主要的自動駕駛班車企業的產品結構的比較 - 小型公共汽車
  • 主要的自動駕駛班車企業的產品結構的比較 - 機器人巴士
  • 趨勢1
  • 趨勢2
  • 趨勢3
  • 趨勢4
  • 趨勢5
  • 趨勢6

第2章 自動駕駛班車產業的政策

  • 中國的智慧型聯網汽車政策
  • 中國的智慧巴士產業政策
  • 中國的自動駕駛班車的標準和規格
  • 北京的自動駕駛班車的管理規則
  • 功能性自動駕駛車的自動駕駛功能的現場試驗的方法與必要條件
  • "自動駕駛巴士" 協會規格的公開
    • 自動駕駛巴士的運行技術的必要條件
    • 自動駕駛巴士的現場試驗

第3章 中國的自動駕駛班車企業

  • Baidu Apollo
  • ECHIEV
  • MOGO
  • WeRide
  • QCraft
  • Unity Drive
  • UISEE
  • SenseAuto
  • Freetech
  • Ant Ranger
  • Skywilling
  • Idriverplus
  • Shanghai Space
  • Bus Me
  • Banma Zhixing

第4章 中國的自動駕駛班車系統廠商

  • Dongfeng Yuexiang
  • Yutong Bus
  • Skywell
  • 中國Shaanqi的自動駕駛巴士
  • FAW Hongqi的智慧型小型公共汽車

第5章 外國的自動駕駛班車系統廠商

  • Navya
  • EasyMile
  • May Mobility
  • Holon
  • ZF
  • Toyota
  • Hyundai 42 Dot
  • ZOOX
  • 其他企業
簡介目錄
Product Code: FZQ007

Autonomous Shuttle Research: application scenarios further extend amidst policy promotion and continuous exploration

Autonomous shuttles are roughly categorized into minibuses and robobuses. Minibuses, namely micro-circulation shuttle buses, mostly work in airports, parks, scenic spots, campuses, communities and other scenarios at speeds of 25-45km/h. Typical minibuses are offered by FAW Hongqi, Baidu Apollo and UISEE.

Robobuses are autonomous minibuses running at 40-60 km/h under the control of software. They are often seen in open scenarios such as transportation hubs and urban trunk roads, and provide urban public transport services. Representative robobuses include Qcraft ONE and MOGO BUS M2.

I. Autonomous driving solution providers flood into the arena of shuttle buses.

In the arena of shuttle buses, main players embrace OEMs, auto parts companies and autonomous driving solution providers, among which L4 autonomous driving technology providers perform stunningly. For example, the robobus co-built by Shanghai Space and PIX Moving was delivered offline in March 2022, and officially began to provide short-distance shuttle services between Wangjiazhuang Subway Station and Xiantao Big Data Valley, Yubei District, Chongqing in June 2022. In July 2022, the driverless buses from Idriverplus landed in Beijing Dongsheng Science and Technology Park to start the normal operation and serve commuters in the park. In September 2022, MOGO officially released the autonomous OEM production buses - MOGO BUS M1 (autonomous minibus) and MOGO BUS M2 (autonomous bus), both equipped with the "vehicle-road-cloud integration" system.

As well robotaxises that adopt L4 technology, autonomous shuttles boast sensors such as LiDAR, radar and cameras, and combine cloud software and sensors to enable vehicle positioning, environmental perception, path planning & decision, and vehicle control & actuation. At present, many L4 technical solution providers like QCraft, UISEE, MOGO, WeRide and Baidu Apollo have laid out technology routes for both robotaxis and robobuses.

II. The operation scenarios of autonomous shuttles are extending from designated areas and low-speed scenarios to open environments and complex scenarios.

At present, autonomous shuttles are running from closed and semi-closed designated areas (parks, scenic spots, factories, communities, campuses, airports, etc.) to urban public roads as subway shuttle buses, urban microcirculation buses, and autonomous buses for ride-hailing services.

III. The current growth of the autonomous shuttle market is mainly driven by policies and smart road upgrades.

1. China, the United States, Japan, and South Korea have issued favorable policies for autonomous buses.

Japan, the United States and South Korea among other foreign countries have introduced policies to encourage the commercial operation of autonomous vehicles like autonomous shuttles.

  • On March 10, 2022, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) of the United States issued a first-of-its-kind final rule, the Occupant Protection Safety Standards for Vehicles Without Driving Controls, no longer requiring automated vehicle manufacturers to equip their ADS-enabled vehicles with traditional manual controls to meet crash standards.
  • Japan decided to allow for use of L4 autonomous vehicles (controlled by system) in transit and delivery services from April 1, 2023.
  • South Korea proposed a goal of commercializing L4 (highly automated) autonomous buses and shuttle buses by 2025 under its "Mobility Innovation Roadmap". On November 25, 2022, Seoul, capital of South Korea, opened the first autonomous bus line with a total mileage of about 3.4 kilometers, marking South Korea's first step to commercialize autonomous shuttles.

In China, Beijing, Shenzhen and other cities have standardized autonomous shuttles in terms of product standards and administration, setting an example for the development of the industry.

  • In January 2022, the "Automated Driving Bus" association standard jointly drafted by Baidu, China Academy of Information and Communications Technology (CAICT), ZTE and Geely was officially released. This standard covers two parts: Automated Driving Bus - Part 1: Vehicle Operation Technical Requirements, and Autonomous Bus - Part 2: Test Methods and Requirement of Automated Driving Feature. They specify the technical requirements for autonomous buses in terms of basic safety, information security, operation safety and autonomous driving tests.
  • In March 2022, Beijing High-level Autonomous Driving Demonstration Zone issued the Detailed Implementation Rules for Road Testing and Demonstrative Application of Intelligent Connected Buses in Beijing Intelligent Connected Vehicle Policy Pilot Zone (Trial), posing specific administrative requirements for in-vehicle management, vehicle operation, road test, insurance and technical parameters.
  • In November, 2022, Beijing High-level autonomous driving Demonstration Zone issued the "Detailed Rules for the Administration of Autonomous Shuttles in Beijing Intelligent Connected Vehicle Policy Pilot Zone (Road Testing and Demonstrative Application)". It is China's first normative policy for new short-distance passenger transport intelligent connected products without a driver's seat or steering wheel and is also China's first policy to give corresponding right of way to autonomous shuttles in a coded form.

2. The construction and upgrading of smart roads accelerate the large-scale application of autonomous shuttles.

The construction of smart roads is the premise for operating autonomous shuttles. In particular, the planning of smart bus lines in various urban demonstration areas has favored the application of robobuses. So far, Beijing, Xiong'an New Area, Guangzhou, Ezhou, Zibo, Changsha, Wuxi, Zhengzhou, Chongqing, Hainan and the like have taken the lead in introducing autonomous shuttles on the basis of smart roads.

As of September 2022, Wuhan Economic & Technological Development Zone had opened 321km test roads in total for intelligent connected vehicles, of which 106km is fully covered by 5G and CVIS. It had deployed more than 1,800 intelligent roadside units such as cameras, LiDARs, radars and edge computing servers at 96 smart intersections to support real-time information exchange between vehicles, between vehicles and roads, between vehicles and the Internet. Among the autonomous shuttles landing in Wuhan Economic & Technological Development Zone, more than 30 Sharing-VANs from Dongfeng Yuexiang have come into normal operation, travelling a total of over 209,000 kilometers.

Guangzhou has opened a total of 353 test sections for intelligent connected vehicles, with a cumulative one-way mileage of 654.451 kilometers and a two-way mileage of 1,308.902 kilometers. From August 2022 to December 2023, Guangzhou starts an autonomous driving pilot project for urban mobility, and introduces 50 autonomous buses from different companies on the loop lines around Canton Tower and Guangzhou International Bio Island, providing at least 1 million rides for passengers.

Accompanied by the construction and upgrading of smart roads as well as the promotion of seamless mobility services, autonomous shuttles and robotaxi will be integrated into intelligent city transportation systems together to offer diversified smart mobility services.

IV. Autonomous shuttle companies are exploring new business models such as PRT

Autonomous shuttles are a solution to "first-mile and last-mile" mobility. As autonomous shuttles penetrate into urban communities, subway stations, etc., how to activate the "peripheral nerves" of urban traffic on large scale is one of the issues that need urgent consideration in urban governance.

For seamless mobility services, some companies are exploring new business models.

For example, Dongfeng Yuexiang's S-PRT (Sharing-Personal Rapid Transit) is a shared novel autonomous public transportation system composed of fully autonomous small vehicles and dedicated road networks. As a rapid nonstop public transportation tool with low construction cost (one-fifteenth of subways), it can transport an average of 10,000 to 30,000 people per hour at the average speed of 40-60km/h, and allows users to reserve without needing to wait. Dongfeng Yuexiang aims for test and demonstration of an operating mileage of more than 10 million kilometers in the Xiong'an New Area within three years, and promotes the "Xiong'an Solution" with partners in no less than 30 cities.

At the beginning of 2023, PIX Moving signed a strategic agreement with Common Rail (Hangzhou) Intelligent Industry Development Co., Ltd. on joint construction of a common rail project in Xiaoshan, Hangzhou. They will provide autonomous shuttles based on PIX's chassis technology to solve the problems of large-scale commercialization of autonomous driving technology and urban traffic congestion.

Table of Contents

1 Overview and Status Quo of Autonomous Shuttle Industry

  • 1.1 Definition of Autonomous Shuttle
  • 1.2 Composition of Autonomous Shuttle System
  • 1.3 Autonomous Shuttle Operation Models
  • 1.4 Application Scenario Comparison between Main Autonomous Shuttle Companies - Minibuses
  • 1.5 Application Scenario Comparison between Main Autonomous Shuttle Companies - Robobuses
  • 1.6 Product Configuration Comparison between Main Autonomous Shuttle Companies - Minibuses
  • 1.7 Product Configuration Comparison between Main Autonomous Shuttle Companies - Robobuses
  • 1.8 Trend 1
  • 1.9 Trend 2
  • 1.10 Trend 3
  • 1.11 Trend 4
  • 1.12 Trend 5
  • 1.13 Trend 6

2 Policies for Autonomous Shuttle Industry

  • 2.1 China's Intelligent Connected Vehicle Policies
  • 2.2 China's Smart Bus Industry Policies
  • 2.3 China's Standards and Specifications for Autonomous Shuttles
  • 2.4 Beijing's Administrative Rules for Autonomous Shuttles
  • 2.5 Methods and Requirements for Field Test of Autonomous Driving Functions of Functional Autonomous Vehicles
  • 2.6 Release of "Automated Driving Bus" Association Standard
    • 2.6.1 Technical Requirements for Operation of Autonomous Buses
    • 2.6.2 Autonomous Bus Field Tests

3 Chinese Autonomous Shuttle Companies

  • 3.1 Baidu Apollo
    • 3.1.1 Autonomous Shuttle Layout
    • 3.1.2 Minibuses
    • 3.1.3 Minibus Application Cases
    • 3.1.4 Minibus Operation
    • 3.1.5 Robobuses
    • 3.1.6 Robobus Application Cases
    • 3.1.7 Robobus Operation
    • 3.1.8 Intelligent Platform Solutions
    • 3.1.9 5G Cloud Driver
  • 3.2 ECHIEV
    • 3.2.1 Profile
    • 3.2.2 Products
    • 3.2.3 Product Application
    • 3.2.4 Hardware Configuration of Shuttle Buses for Autonomous Parks
    • 3.2.5 Autonomous Driving Solutions
  • 3.3 MOGO
    • 3.3.1 Profile
    • 3.3.2 Core Technology
    • 3.3.3 Autonomous Shuttles
    • 3.3.4 Autonomous Vehicle Brain
    • 3.3.5 Autonomous Shuttle Application Cases
    • 3.3.6 Algorithms
    • 3.3.6 InterFusion Fusion Perception
    • 3.3.7 Strategic Partners
    • 3.3.8 Dynamics
  • 3.4 WeRide
    • 3.4.1 Profile
    • 3.4.2 Financing
    • 3.4.3 Development History
    • 3.4.4 Mini Robobuses
    • 3.4.5 Sensor Configuration of Mini Robobuses
    • 3.4.6 Mini Robobus Application Cases
    • 3.4.7 Mini Robobus Safety Guarantee
    • 3.4.8 WeRide One
  • 3.5 QCraft
    • 3.5.1 Profile
    • 3.5.2 Dual Engine Strategy
    • 3.5.3 Autonomous Vehicle Gigafactories
    • 3.5.4 Robobuses
    • 3.5.5 Third-generation L4 Hardware Solutions
    • 3.5.6 ONE
    • 3.5.7 Application Cases of ONE
    • 3.5.8 SPACE
    • 3.5.9 Recent Financing and Dynamics
  • 3.6 Unity Drive
    • 3.6.1 Snow Lion Autonomous Shuttle Vehicles
    • 3.6.2 Application Cases of Snow Lion
  • 3.7 UISEE
    • 3.7.1 Core Technology
    • 3.7.2 Autonomous Shuttles
    • 3.7.3 L4 Commercial Production Robobuses
    • 3.7.4 Systematic Solutions
    • 3.7.5 Application Cases of Autonomous Shuttles and Medium Buses
  • 3.8 SenseAuto
    • 3.8.1 Intelligent Automotive Platform
    • 3.8.2 Robobuses
    • 3.8.3 AR Robobuses
    • 3.8.4 Autonomous Bus Application
    • 3.8.5 SenseAuto V2X
  • 3.9 Freetech
    • 3.9.1 Profile
    • 3.9.2 Robobus Configuration
    • 3.9.3 Robobus Fused Positioning Technology
  • 3.10 Ant Ranger
    • 3.10.1 Profile
    • 3.10.2 "City Light" Shuttle Bus
    • 3.10.3 "Urban Elf" Shuttle Bus
  • 3.11 Skywilling
    • 3.11.1 Profile
    • 3.11.2 Shuttle Buses
    • 3.11.3 VCU
  • 3.12 Idriverplus
    • 3.12.1 Profile
    • 3.12.2 Robobuses
  • 3.13 Shanghai Space
  • 3.14 Bus Me
  • 3.15 Banma Zhixing

4 Chinese Autonomous Shuttle System Integrators

  • 4.1 Dongfeng Yuexiang
    • 4.1.1 Profile
    • 4.1.2 Product Lines
    • 4.1.3 Sharing-Van
    • 4.1.4 Sharing-Bus
    • 4.1.5 Autonomous Sightseeing Vehicles
    • 4.1.6 Application of Autonomous Shuttles
    • 4.1.7 Ecosystem Product Lines
    • 4.1.8 L4 Autonomous Driving System Solutions
    • 4.1.9 AD Controllers and Cloud Control Gateways
    • 4.1.10 Cloud-controlled Collaborative Solutions
    • 4.1.11 Cooperative Events
  • 4.2 Yutong Bus
    • 4.2.1 WitGo Smart Mobility Solution
    • 4.2.2 Configuration of Xiaoyu 2.0
    • 4.2.3 Application Cases of Xiaoyu 2.0
    • 4.2.4 E6S Microcirculation Minibuses
    • 4.2.5 Yumeng E7S
  • 4.3 Skywell
  • 4.4 Autonomous Buses of China Shaanqi
  • 4.5 Intelligent Minibuses of FAW Hongqi

5 Overseas Autonomous Shuttle System Integrators

  • 5.1 Navya
    • 5.1.1 Profile
    • 5.1.2 Operation Scope of Autonom® Shuttle
    • 5.1.3 technical parameters of Autonom® Shuttle Evo
    • 5.1.4 Navya Drive Autonomous Driving System
    • 5.1.5 Sales of Target Markets Worldwide (by Continent)
    • 5.1.6 Implementation of Shuttle Bus Projects (by Country)
    • 5.1.7 Operating Data: Revenue, 2018H1-2022H1
    • 5.1.8 Operating Data: Autonomous Shuttle Sales, 2017-2022Q3
    • 5.1.9 Partners
  • 5.2 EasyMile
    • 5.2.1 Profile
    • 5.2.2 EZ10 Autonomous Shuttles
    • 5.2.3 Application of EZ10
    • 5.2.4 Cooperation Cases
  • 5.3 May Mobility
    • 5.3.1 Profile
    • 5.3.2 Autonomous Shuttles
    • 5.3.3 Product Application
    • 5.3.4 Partners
  • 5.4 Holon
    • 5.4.1 Autonomous Shuttles
    • 5.4.2 Autonomous Bus Application Plan
  • 5.5 ZF
    • 5.5.1 Shuttle Buses
    • 5.5.2 Shuttle Bus Application
    • 5.5.3 Introduction to 2getthere
    • 5.5.4 2getthere's GRT Vehicles
  • 5.6 Toyota
    • 5.6.1 e-Palette
    • 5.6.2 APM (Accessible People Mover)
    • 5.6.3 MX221
  • 5.7 Hyundai 42 Dot
  • 5.8 ZOOX
  • 5.9 Other Players