Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Abu Dhabi could be trailblazer for autonomous cars

Abu Dhabi street with traffic Unsplash/Zalfa Imani
The roads of Abu Dhabi will soon be home to more autonomous vehicles, according to Bayanat's predictions
  • Bayanat runs pilot scheme of 12 vehicles
  • CEO expects widespread use in ‘next five years’
  • Regulation challenges remain

Abu Dhabi will be one of the first cities in the world to introduce autonomous vehicles en masse, according to the CEO of tech firm Bayanat.

Bayanat uses artificial intelligence to provide geospatial data products and services. It is running a pilot scheme in the UAE capital, introducing eight autonomous vehicles, four minibuses and more than 15 charging stations in the city.

“I believe within the next five years we’ll see more and more autonomous cars within the streets of Abu Dhabi,” Bayanat CEO Hasan Al Hosani told AGBI. “We’re going to push hard to make sure that vision happens.”

Bayanat has tested self-driving vehicles on Yas Island and Saadiyat Island. It is majority-owned by G42, the Abu Dhabi artificial intelligence enterprise.

The company has been working with the Department of Municipalities and Transport and the Integrated Transport Centre.

It has also formed partnerships with businesses including China’s WeRide, which earlier this year received a first preliminary licence in the UAE to operate self-driving cars in the country.

Before receiving the licence, WeRide’s Robotaxi had completed public testing. It also offered free rides to visitors to Saadiyat Island and Yas Island in June in a vehicle called TXAI, launched in collaboration with Bayanat.

Rapid evolution

“We will see some cities grow faster than other cities, but from Abu Dhabi’s perspective we are very confident that we will be one of the fastest cities to evolve and deploy large-scale autonomous cars very soon,” said Al Hosani, a former officer in the UAE armed forces.

Shares in Bayanat were floated on the Abu Dhabi Exchange in October raising AED57.5 billion ($15.65 billion) in an initial public offering.

With the emergence of autonomous vehicles in the UAE, the challenges of regulation become evident. 

“Autonomous driving aims to transform road traffic, reducing accidents and congestion,” said Dr Hamad Khalifa Alnuaimi, head of telecommunications/IT at Abu Dhabi Police. “While progress has been significant, challenges remain in technology, human behaviour, ethics and legal aspects.”

Legal issues may include requirements for special licences and liability concerns that could impede widespread adoption.

“While there are aspirations for autonomous taxis and buses, the intricacies of liability and responsibility must be ironed out before these innovations hit the mainstream,” Alnuaimi added.

US-based Cruise said last year it planned to have its autonomous vehicles on Dubai’s roads in 2023.

Self-driving transport has long been a goal of transportation technology research. As far back as the 1970s, early efforts in the US and the UK produced limited self-driving functionalities in automobiles.

Latest articles

Opec predicts global crude demand will rise by around 2 million barrels a day in both 2024 and 2025

Opec maintains stance on oil demand predictions

Opec has kept its global oil demand prediction unchanged for this year as the global economy showed resilience, surpassing initial projections in some instances. The oil producers block said in its monthly report on Tuesday that it believed global crude demand would increase by 2.2 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2024 and by 1.8 […]

Prime minister of Qatar Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani said GCC states need to coordinate their efforts in sectors such as AI

Qatar calls for greater GCC cooperation as it diversifies economy

Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund will continue a policy of diversification, investing in Central Asia and Africa, but Gulf countries need to do more to unify their economic growth plans to face rising geopolitical risks, Qatar’s prime minister said on Tuesday.  “Our focus in terms of the sovereign wealth fund and investment continues following the strategy […]

Workers at a semiconductor plant in the Netherlands. Qatar's investment in France's Ardian comes as global demand for semiconductor chips is surging

QIA invests in French semiconductor fund Ardian

Qatar Investment Authority (QIA), the country’s sovereign wealth fund, has announced plans to make an anchor investment in Ardian Semiconductor, a new entity established by the French private equity firm Ardian.  The move underscores the Gulf state’s bet on the crucial role of semiconductors in powering digital and green transformations in key areas such as […]

The presidents of Egypt and the UAE, Abdel Fattah El Sisi and Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan

Egypt receives second tranche of UAE’s $35bn investment

Egyptian authorities have received the second tranche of a $35 billion investment from the UAE, local media reported on Tuesday. The payment secures the right of Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund ADQ to develop the land of Ras el Hekma on Egypt’s north coast. The $20 billion tranche consists of $14 billion fresh money and […]