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BEIJING, Jan. 13 -- China's booming car industry celebrated the birth of
its own world-class vehicle safety system yesterday with a new vehicle
assessment programme.
Tsinghua University and China Automobile Association (CAA) signed an
agreement in Beijing to launch the New Car Assessment Programme in China (NCAP
China).
CAA will provide a launch-fund of 30 million yuan (US$3.72 million) for the
first phase (five years) of the project.
"This is not about creating a competing standard with the Chinese
Government's minimum vehicle safety standard," said Zhang Jinhuan, director of
Tsinghua's renowned Accident Crash Lab. "The NCAP standards are complementary to
and support existing governmental standards."
NCAP, founded in 1978 in the US, is the most popular industry standard for
vehicle safety evaluation in the world, especially for new cars.
When they enter the market, NCAP tests them by crashing them at high speed,
and allows scientists to measure and analyze safety performance. It then gives
out fair and transparent data and reports about the results of the tests.
NCAP aims to raise consumer awareness of vehicle safety as well as help car
manufacturers improve the safety design features of their vehicles.
"We will be contributing funding, expertise and a deep connection with and
understanding of China's drivers. Our expertise in NCAP comes from our parent
company, IAG, being a founding member of NCAP in Australia 15 years ago," said
Richard Harding, chief executive officer of CAA.
Harding said China "needs a world-class consumer-based vehicle safety
standard that builds confidence in the safety of cars."
"To enter the international market, China's auto brands must break market
entry barriers. That is one of the objectives of NCAP China," added Harding.
"The crash tests and research conducted under NCAP China will provide rich,
in-depth automobile safety data to car manufacturers, so that they can improve
their product designs. This not only improves the safety of cars being driven on
China's roads, but also must be good for the export sale of Chinese manufactured
cars abroad," said Zhang of Tsinghua.
(Source: Shenzhen Daily/Agencies) |