Xpeng to roll out self-driving software for Malaysia in two years; 3 SUV models for RHD markets this year

Xpeng to roll out self-driving software for Malaysia in two years; 3 SUV models for RHD markets this year

Xpeng vice president of finance James Wu has stated that the brand aims to bring its self-driving software to Malaysia within two years, in addition to stating that its local assembly plans for the Malaysian market will commence in the second half of this year. This follows an earlier update in January this year by Bermaz regarding local assembly (CKD) plans for the brand.

The manufacturer aims to introduce its own self-driving system to Malaysia within two years through its Vision Language Action (VLA 2.0) artificial intelligence software update, subject to regulatory approval. Dubbed XNGP (Xpeng Navigation Guided Pilot), this does not require local on-road AI training data, and can be deployed to its vehicles as soon as the vehicles are on-road, claimed the manufacturer.

This is likely to be part of two “significant OTA updates” which are to be rolled out this year, meanwhile, the manufacturer’s wider product strategy for right-hand-drive markets will include one compact, one mid-sized and one large SUV this year, said Wu; the latter has been indicated to be coming to Malaysia later this year.

L: Xpeng G9, R: Xpeng GX in China

In addition, Xpeng plans to begin testing of its robotaxi in China this year, while it is also “actively working on” development work for its semi-autonomous driving systems equivalent to Level 2.5 in Europe, Wu said.

The manufacturer’s vice president believes the firm is “close to fully autonomous driving”, and Xpeng is around 12 months from achieving fully autonomous driving capability, though regulatory hurdles are another matter, according to Wu.

For CKD operations, this will be done with a focus on the localisation of the supply chain for electric vehicle (EV) parts, such as for batteries and advanced driving assistance systems (ADAS), Wu said. Localisation for Xpeng will be through EP Manufacturing Berhad (EPMB), the Melaka-based outfit that will carry out contract manufacturing of the Xpeng G6 and X9 in Malaysia.

Xpeng vice president of finance, James Wu (left)

Efforts towards the local assembly of Xpeng models are focused on the localisation of the EV supply chain, such as for battery and advanced driving assistance systems components. However, this presents a challenge that is more applicable to manufacturers of electric vehicles than for manufacturers of internal combustion-engined vehicles.

According to Wu, there are “virtually no suppliers” of battery and ADAS components in Malaysia, which both consist of a significant proportion of the parts that go into making an Xpeng model. As electric vehicles typically are made from fewer components relative to an ICE-powered vehicle, that makes it more difficult to attain a target percentage of parts which can be localised in Malaysia.

That presents a complex hurdle for Xpeng to overcome, though beyond local assembly challenges, Wu said that Xpeng is also committed to introducing autonomous driving to the mainstream, including its aforementioned plan for introducing its self-driving software to the Malaysian market within two years.

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Mick Chan

Open roads and closed circuits hold great allure for Mick Chan. Driving heaven to him is exercising a playful chassis on twisty paths; prizes ergonomics and involvement over gadgetry. Spent three years at a motoring newspaper and short stint with a magazine prior to joining this website.

 

Comments

  • Ash Burn on May 26, 2026 at 7:52 pm

    Tesla FSD for malaysia in two decades later KEK

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  • Suryn on May 26, 2026 at 8:57 pm

    Japanese engineers are one of the smartest i have worked with, and they definitely know what they are doing, they sell a Lexus to last, deliver their promise and honor it till the end. This junk doesn’t even have original spares or after market parts, neither does their own service center capable of supporting this vehicle, because they never intended to maintain the product line longer than 3 – 5yrs. Anyway, you wouldn’t understand. Please get back to your kongsi meeting.

    Thumb up 8 Thumb down 21
    • gonn ait aiters on May 27, 2026 at 8:50 am

      ironic because we remember how unethical jap knowingly manufactured faulty takata airbags killing and maiming hundreds of drivers.
      also they released radioactive nuclear wastewater into pacific ocean.

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    • suryn dodo on May 27, 2026 at 9:57 am

      your so called smart jap engineers cant even develop self-driving cars

      Thumb up 3 Thumb down 4
    • PiggaPeppa on May 28, 2026 at 7:49 am

      so salty. you’re just concerned because you just purchased a used Lexus? worried nobody want that 3.0L junk after 5 years? haha welcome to the new century, brother

      Thumb up 3 Thumb down 2
  • Jebis on May 26, 2026 at 9:47 pm

    The cars sold so far might not be able to fully self-drive even after 2-3 years of software updates, because they don’t have the right hardware.

    Thumb up 3 Thumb down 1
  • Yeah, we are going to get the cars with Turing!!!

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  • opmanmy on May 27, 2026 at 11:35 am

    roll out than talk la…2 years..anything can happen between then..delay after delay perhaps? lets see what will happen by then.

    in ev world, 2 year is a long long time, anything goes.

    Thumb up 0 Thumb down 1
    • opanmy on May 27, 2026 at 1:23 pm

      MeeTee will interfere and demand that selfdriving cars are sold above RM300k

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    • Mike Tee on May 28, 2026 at 12:40 pm

      They are already running XNGP in their home market so any delay will be regulatory delay caused by our own government

      Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0
  • Sonyman on May 27, 2026 at 1:52 pm

    In 2 years this James probably won’t be there in xpeng anymore

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  • willie on May 28, 2026 at 9:52 am

    am not sure if the car is equipped to handle non road line which our non-hoghway road mostly consist of now u see, now u dont.

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    • Mike Tee on May 28, 2026 at 12:44 pm

      If I employed you to come up with self driving software, would you design it to only work when road markings are available?

      XNGP, Huawei Qiankun, Nio NAD, Zeekr G-Pilot, BYD God’s Eye (unfortunate name), Tesla FSD, none of them need road markings to operate

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  • The VLA 2.0 is only for the vehicle with Turing processing capability. Existing XPENG in Malaysia doesn’t have this hardware.

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    • momob ain on May 29, 2026 at 12:22 am

      ironic because even the downgraded ccp car self-dvring ability is far better than anything japanese cars can offer.

      Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0
 

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