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Ford and Toyota top self-driving technology league table

Written by Nikkei Asia Published on   4 mins read

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Both ahead of IT giants in patent terms, as traditional techniques come into focus.

Leading carmakers such as Ford Motor and Toyota Motor are catching up with tech giants in the global race to develop self-driving technology as indicated by new patent data.

The two companies claimed the top two positions on a list of most competitive firms in terms of patents related to autonomous driving technology. The list was compiled by Nikkei and based on a survey of patents registered in the US by the end of January conducted by Patent Result Co., a Tokyo-based company that analyzes such licenses.

Ford and Toyota have overtaken Waymo, the autonomous car company owned by Google’s parent company Alphabet, which topped the previous list made in July 2018.

As self-driving technology edges closer to practical use, automakers are now threatening to one-up IT powerhouses that once led the pack, given their expertise in conventional car manufacturing.

A total of 12 Japanese companies including Sony as well as major carmakers like Toyota, Honda Motor, and Nissan Motor, were among the top 50 on the list. But Japanese players are still trailing their US and Chinese rivals in terms of total distances covered in test driving on public roads in the US.

In the survey commissioned by Nikkei, Patent Result analyzed the competitiveness of a patent by the number of times it was cited in reports by international organizations, the number of times it was challenged by other companies, and the number of appeals filed in relation to it. Nikkei then created the list that showed a company to be more competitive the higher it scores.

Ford topped the list with a score of 6,054 with 1,195 patents in force, followed by Toyota which notched up a score of 5,349 on 1,705 patents. Waymo slipped to third place with a score of 4,895 on 582 patents.

Watch this: VIDEO | How are Tesla’s Chinese rivals faring in 2021?

Graph by Nikkei Asia.

Established carmakers and car parts suppliers took seven of the top 10 slots. Ford’s score was 260% higher than in the previous survey, while Toyota’s jumped 140%. Waymo also fared well, boosting its score by 70% this time.

Toyota and Ford have overtaken Waymo by increasing their autonomous driving patents sharply. Both companies own 2.5 times more patents in force now than they did back then. The number of patents owned by Waymo also increased, but by a less impressive 80%.

Another reason behind the advance of conventional car manufacturers is the large number of patents they own in traditional car technologies. As self-driving technology has become more practically applicable, these patents have been more often cited and targeted in appeals.

With regard to the competitiveness of drivetrain technology, Toyota came on top with a score of 3,467 points, followed by Ford which scored 3,137. Waymo fell behind with a score of 2,486 points.

Ford and Toyota boast highly competitive technologies in adjusting motor output and building steering systems. In particular, Ford is way ahead of rivals in autonomous parking technology with a related score of 1,115 points, three times and five times higher than those of Toyota and Waymo respectively.

Ford has surged to the top in this area by acquiring Quantum Signal AI, a company focused on mobile robotics, modeling, and simulation, in 2019. The automaker is on track to equip its vehicles with the technology in the not-so-distant future, given that it successfully demonstrated it in the US in 2020.

Nonlife insurance provider State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance was ranked fifth, thanks to its competitive sensor technology used in collecting information about self-driving vehicles via the internet and assessing the conditions of vehicles.

Its sensor-related patents were cited 2,552 times by inventors of patented autonomous driving technologies, 70% higher than the comparative figure for Toyota. Even though the insurer owns only 231 patents, one-seventh of Toyota’s, the quality of its patents is regarded with high esteem because sensor technology is at the heart of autonomous driving.

Chinese and South Korean companies also have established a respectable presence among the top 50 players. In the previous survey, only one South Korean company, Hyundai Motor, was on the top 50 list. This time, however, five South Korean and two Chinese companies made it to the list. Baidu, the largest internet search engine in China, was ranked 23rd, and Nio, a multinational electric vehicle manufacturer headquartered in Shanghai, 35th.

Some IT giants have dropped out of the race. Uber Technologies completed the sale of its autonomous driving unit, Uber Advanced Technologies Group, to self-driving car startup Aurora Innovation at the end of January.

Lyft announced at the end of April it will sell its autonomous vehicle division to Toyota. Some IT companies are withdrawing from the market following some high-profile accidents in recent years that had attracted bad media coverage.

This article first appeared on Nikkei Asia. It’s republished here as part of 36Kr’s ongoing partnership with Nikkei.

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