China’s Baidu plans to start production of self-driving bus next year

Chinese search giant Baidu plans to put driverless buses on the road next year, according to CEO Robin Li.
Baidu said it will start producing and testing the buses in July next year, in cooperation with Chinese bus maker King Long. The buses will run along a short designated road, but the company hasn't released any further details about their seating capacity or where the trials will take place.
The self-driving buses are supposed to “tap huge commercial value while tackling the country’s long-standing congestion problem”, says Lu Qi, Baidu’s COO.

Baidu is leading China’s self-driving market. But unlike Alphabet's Waymo in the US, Baidu doesn’t manufacture the cars. Instead, it aims to sell its software to car makers.
Baidu's open-source software platform, Apollo, launched in April this year, and now has about 70 partners including Microsoft and Nvidia. It has vowed to launch a driverless car by 2018, with mass production to begin by 2021.