Tesla beats Chinese rivals BYD, Xiaomi & Huawei in driving assisted tests: Report
Tesla scored the best in the highway test among 36 models, with its Model 3 and Model X passing five out of six scenarios.
State television CCTV and Dcar jointly tested the level 2 advanced driving assistance systems (ADAS) from more than 20 electric vehicle brands in China and rated their performance in a series of scenarios with higher risks of accidents on highways and urban traffic.
Also check these Cars
Find more Cars
Tesla Model Y 75 kwh
75 kwh 622 km
622 km
₹ 59.89 Lakhs
Compare
View Offers
MG M9 EV 90 kWh
90 kWh 548 km
548 km
₹ 69.90 Lakhs
Compare
View Offers
Volvo C40 Recharge 78 kWh
78 kWh 530 km
530 km
₹ 62.95 Lakhs
Compare
View Offers
UPCOMING VinFast VF7 75.3 kWh
75.3 kWh 450 km
450 km
₹ 60 - 65 Lakhs
Alert Me When Launched
Kia EV6 84 kWh
84 kWh 663 km
663 km
₹ 65.97 Lakhs
Compare
View Offers
BMW iX1 66.4 kWh
66.4 kWh 417 km
417 km
₹ 66.90 Lakhs
Compare
View Offers
The test videos posted by Dcar went viral on Chinese social media.
Tesla scored the best in the highway test among 36 models, with its Model 3 and Model X passing five out of six scenarios, while BYD's Denza Z9GT and Huawei-backed Aito M9 failed in three scenarios.
Xiaomi's SU7 passed in one of six.
In a Weibo post on Friday, HIMA, the Huawei-led auto alliance, said it declined to comment on the "so-called test."
BYD and Xiaomi didn't immediately respond to requests for comment.
"Due to laws against data export, Tesla achieved the top results in China despite having no local training data," Tesla CEO Elon Musk said on his X account on Friday.
Tesla has been caught in what Musk described as a "quandary", as the U.S. doesn't allow its AI software to be trained in China, while the automaker has been seeking approval from Chinese regulators to transfer data saved locally in Shanghai back to the United States for algorithm training.
Domestic brands should face up to the gap with Tesla in autonomous driving, Wang Yao, deputy chief engineer of the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, told an auto forum in Shanghai earlier this month.
Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun, in remarks after a Tesla Model Y delivered itself from an Austin, Texas factory to its owner in the area roughly 30 minutes away, said "we will continue to learn" from Tesla which has led industry trends.
The test came amid growing safety concerns in China about the ADAS after a highway accident involving a Xiaomi SU7 killed three people in March.
State media have blamed misleading promotions for resulting drivers' improper uses of the technologies and the authorities have banned the uses of terms such as "smart driving" and "autonomous driving" for marketing driving assistance features.
The public security ministry said this week that the country will set out legal responsibilities related to the technology that has yet achieved true autonomous driving. Drivers face safety and legal risks if they are distracted in accidents when assisted driving is turned on, the ministry warned.
Xiaomi had seen a slump in new EV orders as a consumer backlash began in April following the fatal trash, but the impact seems short-lived, with its new electric SUV receiving exceptionally strong initially orders after it went on sale last month.
Tesla's sales of its China-made electric vehicles edged up 0.8% in June from a year earlier, snapping an eight-month losing streak, but they continued to fall on a quarterly basis in the face of lower-cost new models from its Chinese rivals.
Tesla's assisted driving suite is available in China for nearly $9,000, while the technology from its local rivals including Xiaomi and BYD is without extra cost, pressuring the U.S. automaker's self-driving future.
Tesla's technology approach relies solely on cameras as sensors and artificial intelligence while most Chinese peers including BYD use lidar (light detection and range sensors) additionally to ensure performance.
Check out Upcoming EV Cars in India.
First Published Date:

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hindu
9 minutes ago
- The Hindu
Intel CEO to visit White House on Monday: Report
Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan is set to visit the White House on Monday after U.S. President Donald Trump called for his removal last week, the Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday, citing people familiar with the matter. Reuters could not immediately confirm the report. Intel and the White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Tan is expected to have a extensive conversation with Trump while looking to explain his personal and professional background, the report said, adding that he could propose ways Intel and the U.S. government could work together, the report added. Tan hopes to win Trump's approval by showing his commitment to the U.S. and guaranteeing the importance of keeping Intel's manufacturing capabilities as a national security issue, the report added. Last week, Trump demanded the immediate resignation of Tan, calling him "highly conflicted" due to his ties to Chinese firms and raising doubts about plans to turn around the struggling American chip icon. Tan said he shared the president's commitment to advancing U.S. national and economic security.


Mint
9 minutes ago
- Mint
Nvidia, AMD agree to pay 15% of Chinese AI chip revenues to US for export licenses
(Bloomberg) -- Nvidia Corp. and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. agreed to pay 15% of their revenues from Chinese AI chip sales to the US government in a deal to secure export licenses, an unusual arrangement that may unnerve both US companies and Beijing. Nvidia plans to share 15% of the revenue from sales of its H20 AI accelerator in China, according to a person familiar with the matter. AMD will deliver the same share from MI308 revenues, the person added, asking for anonymity to discuss internal deliberations. The arrangement reflects US President Donald Trump's consistent effort to engineer a financial payout for America in return for concessions on trade. His administration has shown a willingness to relax trade conditions like tariffs in return for giant investment in the US — as with Apple Inc.'s pledge to spend $600 billion on domestic manufacturing. But such a narrow, select export tax has little precedent in modern corporate history. Beijing, which has grown increasingly hostile to the idea of Chinese firms deploying the H20, is unlikely to warm to the idea of a chip tax. Yuyuantantian, a social media account affiliated with state-run China Central Television that regularly signals Beijing's thinking about trade, on Sunday slammed the chip's supposed security vulnerabilities and inefficiency. 'This seeming quid pro quo is unprecedented from an export control perspective. The arrangement risks invalidating the national security rationale for U.S. export controls,' said Jacob Feldgoise, a researcher at the DC-based Center for Security and Emerging Technology. It 'will likely undermine the US' position when negotiating with allies to implement complementary controls,' he added. 'Allies may not believe U.S. policymakers if they are willing to trade away those same national security concerns for economic concessions — either from U.S. companies or foreign governments.' An Nvidia spokesperson said the company follows US export rules, adding that while it hasn't shipped H20 chips to China for months, it hopes the rules will allow US companies to compete in China. AMD didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. The Financial Times earlier reported the development. It followed a separate report from the same outlet that the Commerce Department had begun issuing H20 licenses last week, days after Nvidia Chief Executive Officer Jensen Huang met with Trump. Huang has lobbied long and hard for the lifting of restrictions, arguing that walling China off will only slow the spread of American technology and encourage local rivals such as Huawei Technologies Co. 'It's a strategic bargaining chip' that tightens Washington's grip on a critical tech sphere during trade negotiations with China, said Hebe Chen, an analyst with Vantage Markets in Melbourne. 'Over time, this hurdle for chips entering China will likely deter Nvidia and AMD from deeper expansion in the world's largest chip-importing market, while giving local Chinese producers a clear edge to capture market share and accelerate domestic semiconductor innovation.' If Washington goes ahead with the tax, it should funnel some capital to the US — but not an enormous amount in relative terms. Both Nvidia and AMD have said it'll take time to ramp back up production of their China-specific products — even if order levels return to previous levels, which is uncertain. Nvidia raked in $4.6 billion of revenue from the H20 in the fiscal quarter ended April 27 — days after new restrictions on shipping the AI accelerator to China were imposed. It also said it had been unable to ship $2.5 billion of H20 China revenue in that period because of the new rules. That implies it would have got more than $7 billion in H20 sales to China during the period. If it can return to that level, the US government will stand to get about a billion dollars a quarter from its deal. AMD could generate $3 billion to $5 billion of 2025 revenue if restrictions were lifted, Morgan Stanley estimates. Chinese alternatives such as Huawei's Ascend chips now account for 20% to 30% of domestic demand, it reckoned. 'The US government clearly needs the money given its deficits and eagerness to collect tariffs,' said Vey-Sern Ling, managing director at Union Bancaire Privee in Singapore. 'But the complication is China's accusations about H20 chips containing backdoors, which could be a negotiation tactic to highlight that the country is not 'hard up' for US chips.'


India Today
9 minutes ago
- India Today
First look of Tesla's new showroom in Delhi's Aerocity, Model Y on display
Tesla has expanded its footprint in India with the launch of its second showroom, located at Worldmark 3 in Delhi's Aerocity. The new Tesla Experience Centre offer customers a hands-on experience with the brand's electric vehicles and technology. This marks another step in the American EV maker's journey in the Indian market, following the opening of its first showroom in July, 2025. Tesla Model Y at the Delhi showroom. advertisementTesla made its debut in the Indian market on July 15 with the inauguration of its first showroom at Mumbai's Bandra Kurla Complex. The showroom is also equipped with four V4 Supercharging units, offering up to 250kW DC charging at a rate of Rs 24 per kWh. With the inauguration of its first showroom, Tesla also launched the Model Y in India, available in two configurations: Rear-Wheel Drive (RWD) and Long Range Rear-Wheel Drive (LR RWD). The RWD variant is powered by a 60kWh LFP battery, delivering a claimed 500km range on the WLTP cycle. The LR RWD version features a larger battery, extending the range to 622km on a single charge. Tesla Model Y In terms of performance, the RWD can accelerate from 0–100kmph in 5.9 seconds, while the LR RWD achieves the same in 5.6 seconds. Both models have an electronically capped top speed of 201kmph. Charging speeds are equally noteworthy, Tesla's V4 Superchargers can replenish up to 238km of range in 15 minutes for the RWD, and 267km for the LR RWD. Tesla has also introduced India's first self-driving package, priced at Rs 6 lakh over the base cost. While the system includes a complete set of autonomous driving functions, the company notes that certain features will depend on government approval before activation. Pricing is set at Rs 59.89 lakh for the Model Y RWD and Rs 67.89 lakh for the LR RWD (both ex-showroom, Delhi). Optional paint finishes are priced between Rs 95,000 and Rs 1.85 lakh, with Stealth Grey as standard. Customers can book the car with an initial payment of Rs 22,220, followed by a non-refundable Rs 3 lakh within seven days. According to Tesla's website, deliveries of the RWD are expected in Q3 2025, with LR RWD deliveries slated for Q4 2025. In line with the product launch, Tesla inaugurated its first Supercharging station in India at One BKC, Mumbai on August, 4. The facility includes four V4 Supercharging stalls capable of delivering up to 250kW DC charging at Rs 24/kWh, along with four AC Destination Chargers (11kW) priced at Rs 14/kWh. The station caters to both rapid and standard charging needs. The BKC installation is the first of eight planned Supercharger sites across India, as Tesla works to build a dependable EV charging network to support its expanding customer base in the to Auto Today Magazine- EndsMust Watch