Car Industry Puts Cooperation on Show in Battle Against Silicon Valley Firms

Car Industry Puts Cooperation on Show in Battle Against Silicon Valley Firms
Highlights
  • BMW, Daimler and Audi announced new traffic monitoring services
  • Germany's top automakers to help develop next-generation 5G networks
  • Carmakers competing to build self-driving vehicles over next five years
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Alarmed by the threat posed by Silicon Valley firms to their businesses in developing autonomous driving systems, it was evident at the Paris Motor Show this week that carmakers are seeking to fight back by cooperating in areas of technology development where previously they might have tried to compete.

Three big carmakers - BMW, Daimler and VW's Audi - announced earlier this week they would launch new traffic monitoring services next year which give drivers a view of road conditions along their entire route, based on video data collected by their jointly-owned navigation mapping services firm, Here from sensors incorporated in other cars.

Meanwhile Here's Dutch rival TomTom NV, on Thursday announced traffic data deals for truckmaker Volvo and carmaker Skoda, a VW subsidiary.

Connecting cars on the move with the Internet also needs more reliable mobile telecoms networks and towards that end Germany's top automakers said this week they were teaming up with the telecoms network equipment makers Ericsson, Huawei, Nokia, Qualcomm and Intel to help with developing the next-generation 5G networks set to debut around 2020.

It's unfamiliar territory for carmakers who are unaccustomed to cooperating as they battle for distinctive features that will help drive sales of their latest model vehicles.

(Also see: Uber Gives Riders a Preview of the Driverless Future)

"This is how the automotive industry may be able to fight off the threat that Apple and particularly Google represent to their brands as digital services become more and more important," technology investment analyst Richard Windsor said.

Moreover, carmakers are now racing one another to plot their paths to building self-driving vehicles over the next five years.

That's a dramatic acceleration from the 10- to 15-year timeframes many had charted until pushed to speed up the process by the advances made by Google and Tesla.

"We see the car transforming from a product into the ultimate platform," Daimler Chairman Dieter Zetsche said.

(Also see: Ford Plans Self-Driving Car for Ride Share Fleets in 2021)

Now General Motors, Nissan and VW are also experimenting with a plan to pull video data captured by their customers' vehicles using Israeli firm Mobileye's camera-based sensor systems, that may soon give automakers an edge over the likes of Google in the precision-mapping required for driverless cars.

However, it remains to be seen whether carmakers can charge premium prices for connected car services as technology companies like Google look to develop similar offerings for free, supported by advertising or other business models.

A deal by traffic data start-up Inrix to supply Google-owned crowd-sourced mapping unit Waze with its data will help drivers find parking spots on their smartphones via a free app.

(Also see: Google to Take On Uber, Lyft With Waze Ride-Sharing Service)

And on Thursday Renault said it was working with Waze on a Google Android Auto protoype for a navigation app that besides showing traffic conditions will also identify 13,000 electric car-charging stations across France.

Careful driving
Some in the industry are also cautioning that the move to developing fully autonomous driving should remain a very gradual one. Earlier this month pioneering electric car maker Tesla was accused by Mobileye of "pushing the envelope in terms of safety", alleging that it had promoted its Autopilot driver assistance system as "hands-free".

Other carmakers, while reluctant to address the dispute directly, are keen to emphasise that the move to developing truly autonomous vehicles remains a very gradual one."There can be no compromise on safety, which is absolutely crucial - that is why at PSA we've always believed autonomy will happen in incremental steps," PSA Chief Executive Carlos Tavares said in an interview published earlier this month.

"This is not the case for certain competitors who have tried to produce a fully autonomous vehicle right away."

(Also see: Tesla Says It's Improving Autopilot by Boosting Radar)

Among car companies there are two camps: Those who are trying to develop their autonomous driving technology in-house, and those who are outsourcing it.

Fiat's recent partnership to build self-driving vans with Google is seen by analysts as an example of outsourcing, given the Italian auto maker's weak finances, limiting its ability to invest in its own software expertise.

Daimler, on the other hand, is firmly in the camp of those auto makers who want to go it alone.

Some partnerships like the deal between Chinese carmaker Geely's Swedish subsidiary Volvo Car Group's deal to develop autonomous cars with Uber, and General Motor's partnership with Uber's rival Lyft, are seen as hybrid approaches to such cooperation.

(Also see: Lyft Says Most of Its Rides Will Be Autonomous in 5 Years)

"The automotive industry has and will continue to become a software business in many ways," Audi of America President Scott Keogh told Reuters.

"We are either capable of doing it in-house or we are going to all the partners that we need to go to, whether it's Nvidia, Mobileye or Here."

© Thomson Reuters 2016

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