Chinese driverless car start-up WeRide raises $310 million in funding as competition heats up
A car equipped with WeRide autonomous driving technology in Guangzhou, China.
WeRide
GUANGZHOU, China — Chinese driverless car start-up WeRide has raised $310 million in a new round of funding as it pushes to commercialize its technology.
Yutong Group, a Chinese company that manufactures commercial vehicles including electric buses, lead the funding round.
A number of other new investors jumped on board while existing venture capital firms also participated.
WeRide did not disclose its valuation and declined to comment when contacted by CNBC.
The Guangzhou-based firm is among a handful of companies in China vying to become a leader in driverless car technology. WeRide focuses on building the technology that enables vehicles to be autonomous rather than actually manufacturing automobiles.
WeRide’s funding round follows a cash injection into rival Pony.ai in November which saw the latter’s valuation top $5 billion. Other companies including search giant Baidu, start-up AutoX and ride-hailing firm Didi, are competing in the same space.
In a press release, Tony Han, CEO of WeRide said the funding and new investors will give the company the “strategic resources to fulfill the goal of commercializing self-driving technology.”
In late 2019, WeRide launched a robotaxi project in Guangzhou and has since expanded to allow users to hail a ride through Alibaba’s Amap app. The company says it will launch trial operations for “Mini Robobuses” on Friday.
WeRide’s CEO Han previously told CNBC that he predicts the large-scale application of robotaxis will take place between 2023 and 2025. He said that WeRide will begin to make money from the business in 2025.