BMW and Ford win British funds for driverless, low-carbon vehicles

By BLOOMBERG | 11 April 2017


Sensors sit on the exterior of an autonomous vehicle developed by Oxbotica, using Selenium autonomous control software, in London. The UK is investing £110mil in 32 projects covering the development of low-carbon vehicles and driverless cars. — Bloomberg


LONDON: BMW AG, Ford Motor Co and Jaguar Land Rover are among the winners of £110mil (RM605.96mil) from Britain for the development of low-carbon vehicles and driverless cars.

The funding for a total of 38 projects, including £62mil (RM341.50mil) for low-emission cars and £31mil (RM170.78mil) for autonomous vehicles, will help protect almost 2,400 jobs, the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy said April 11.

The cash is part of an effort to identify and nurture industries of the future as Britain pulls itself out of the European Union, putting at risk trade ties to its closest neighbours. Business Secretary Greg Clark has reassured motor manufacturers including Nissan Motor Co and PSA Group of the UK’s commitment to the industry in order to persuade them to maintain and expand their British operations.

“Low carbon and driverless cars are the future and as a government we are determined through the industrial strategy to build on our strengths and put the UK at the forefront of this revolution,” Clark said in an e-mail. “Investment in this technology is an integral part of this government’s efforts to ensure the UK auto sector remains competitive and world-leading.”

Other companies awarded funding include CNH Industrial, Penso Consulting, Westfield Sportscars, Williams Advanced Engineering, Equipmake, Great British Sports Cars, Ricardo Innovations, Romax Technology and Wrightbus.

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