The southern Chinese mega-city Shenzhen is expected to make driverless cars legally available for driving on public roads in the near future.

The Shenzhen government on Thursday reviewed draft regulations for the management of local smart connected cars, which would allow such vehicles to drive on public roads after obtaining registration certificates, number plates and driving permits, the Yangcheng Evening News reported Friday.

The draft relaxes conditions related to road testing of smart cars, stipulating that such vehicles can be put on local highways and urban expressways for road testing and demonstration applications.

Of particular note is that for fully self-driving smart cars to conduct road tests, they can be operated without a driver upon approval by local regulators.

The Shenzhen government can choose areas with better infrastructure for open road testing, demonstration applications and commercialization pilots.

The draft proposes that local organizations should develop local standards for smart connected car products, and encourage relevant industry associations to organize group standards.

Smart connected car products that meet the standards are listed in the Shenzhen smart connected car product catalog and are allowed to be sold, registered and have license plates installed within the SAR, according to the draft.

Baidu to launch world's first fully self-driving Robotaxi service to public on May 2

Shenzhen to allow driverless cars on public roads-CnEVPost

(A WM Motor's WM6 in self-driving mode. Source: CnEVPost)