Stellantis unveiled its latest autonomous driving technologies at the Hi-Drive event in Brussels. The Hi-Drive project focuses on advancing transport automation in complex road conditions. The company showcased two experimental vehicles: the all-electric Peugeot e-2008 and a Maserati Levante.

Stellantis, Peugeot e-2008
media.stellantis.com

The Peugeot e-2008 is equipped with eight lidars, nine cameras, four radars, and V2X connectivity. Together, this sensor suite builds a 360-degree view and enables testing of automated functions in dense urban traffic. The Maserati Levante showcases high-precision mapping, traffic sign recognition, and real-time warnings — a pragmatic pairing that covers both city scenarios and broader perception tasks.

Stellantis, Maserati Levante
media.stellantis.com

Stellantis is testing 5G and short-range communications to exchange information between vehicles and infrastructure. The company already offers Level 2+ systems and is developing Level 4 driverless technology for robotaxis in collaboration with NVIDIA, Uber, Foxconn, and Pony.ai. The breadth of partners signals an effort to blend automotive hardware with AI and mobility platforms — the kind of cross-industry mix that tends to speed up real-world deployment.