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China’s BYD steps up assisted-driving push

By Thomson Reuters May 28, 2026 | 7:59 AM

BEIJING, May 28 (Reuters) – China’s BYD announced new service packages aimed at encouraging more drivers to use its ‘God’s Eye’ assisted-driving system on Thursday.

The ​move marks the latest push by the ‌world’s largest EV maker to build trust in assisted-driving and boost adoption of its three-tier God’s Eye system, as price pressure mounts, domestic demand slows and profits fall.

Chairman Wang ‌Chuanfu ​said the carmaker aimed to ⁠achieve “zero traffic accidents” through ⁠intelligent-driving technology.

BYD said it would fully cover compensation and repairs for any accidents arising when drivers use its City Navigation function, without affecting their ​insurance premiums the following year, in one of its pledges to deploy assisted driving systems more ⁠widely.

BYD’s quarterly profit recently posted ⁠its steepest decline since 2020, even ​as the company rolls out new technology. Its major ​battery upgrade, the first in six years, has ‌failed to reverse the slowdown in domestic sales.

On Thursday, the company also showed off a new self-developed 4-nanometer chip that supports L3 and L4 autonomous ⁠driving.

Global rival Tesla is still awaiting full regulatory approval to deploy its most advanced driver-assistance features in China, while ⁠domestic peers such ‌as Xpeng, Nio and Li Auto ⁠have accelerated the roll-out of AI-based ​systems ‌that use large driving models and real-world ​scenario training.

Wang ⁠said its budget models could be upgraded to God’s Eye B smart-driving capability at a price of 12,000 yuan ($1,770.02).

($1 = 6.7796 Chinese yuan renminbi)

(Reporting by Zhang Yan, Ju-min Park, Qiaoyi Li; Editing by Joe Bavier ​and Elaine Hardcastle)