China’s Baidu wants to launch its driverless robotaxi service in 100 cities by 2030
An Apollo Robotaxi runs at Shougang Park as Baidu launches China’s first driverless taxi service in the city on May 2, 2021 in Beijing, China.
He Luqi | Qianlong.com | Visual China Group | Getty Images
GUANGZHOU, China — Baidu plans to launch its driverless taxi service in 100 cities by 2030, as the Chinese search giant looks to diversify its business beyond advertising.
Currently, Baidu operates its Apollo Go robotaxi service in five Chinese cities. Users can hail an autonomous car via an app.
The company wants to expand Apollo Go to 65 cities by 2025 and then 100 cities by 2030, Baidu CEO Robin Li said in an internal letter that was made public.
The speed of Baidu’s expansion plan highlights the company’s investment in autonomous driving, an area analysts see as being a multi-billion dollar business for the tech giant in the future.
Baidu’s earnings report
Baidu’s driverless car announcement comes after the company reported revenue of 31.92 billion yuan ($4.95 billion) for the third quarter, which was ahead of market expectations.
However, Li warned that ad spending has been impacted by a slowdown in China’s economic growth, particularly in areas including education and real estate. Baidu still makes the majority of its revenue from advertising.
“We expect this headwind to continue in the near term,” the CEO said on an earnings call Wednesday.
Baidu’s Hong Kong listed shares fell more than 8% on Thursday after the numbers.
To diversify its business, Baidu has invested in areas from semiconductors to electric vehicles and autonomous driving.
Baidu is not building cars but it’s behind the driverless technology in the vehicles. The company has partnered with various Chinese automakers to expand its robotaxi fleet.