China sets ‘critical’ rules to corral safe self-driving EVs after Xiaomi’s fatal crash

An organisation representing China’s biggest carmakers has urged its members to enhance driving safety and avoid exaggerating the capabilities of their self-navigating systems, following a fatal crash involving Xiaomi’s SU7 electric vehicle (EV) last month.

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Carmakers should improve product safety designs and develop effective warning systems to alert drivers, the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM) said on Monday in a joint statement with the China Society of Automotive Engineers. The groups outlined several initiatives to guide carmakers in standardising the promotion and application of driver-assistance systems.

The country’s EV industry “has developed rapidly and the combined driver assistance (level 2 driving automation) has entered a critical period of large-scale application”, the statement said. The initiatives were aimed at “building a healthy ecosystem and promoting the safe application of driver assistance products”, it added.

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Xiaomi to cooperate with police after fatal crash involving self-drive feature on SU7 EV

Xiaomi to cooperate with police after fatal crash involving self-drive feature on SU7 EV

The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) summoned officials from 60 companies to a meeting earlier this month, asking them to fully comply with regulations governing the development of self-driving technologies. The government also warned them not to overstate the role of the driver-assistance systems.

The MIIT told the company representatives that the words “smart driving”, “advanced smart driving” and “autonomous driving” could not be used in promoting existing self-driving systems.

In mainland China, most available self-driving ­systems are classified as either level 2 (L2) or L2+, both of which require drivers to keep their hands on the wheel at all times. Beijing has yet to legalise L3 – a “hands-off” system based on standards set by US-based SAE International. All drivers are required to be fully alert, even with the system turned on.

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A Xiaomi SU7 crashed in central Anhui province last month, claiming three lives. The car was travelling at 116km/h on a highway with the driver-assistance system engaged, adding that the system alerted the driver to take over the wheel two seconds before it hit a concrete barrier, the EV maker said.

South China Morning Post

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