Coronavirus fears prompt Chinese ride-hailing app DiDi to install protective sheets in vehicles and give masks to drivers

Didi Kualdi
Taxi-hailing app Didi Kuaidi controls around 90 per cent of the Chinese market.

Simon Song

  • Chinese rideshare company DiDi Chuxing is installing protective sheets in vehicles to protect against the spread of the novel coronavirus, COVID-19.

  • The outbreak that originated in Wuhan, China, has killed 2,012 people and infected more than 75,000 according to recent totals.

  • DiDi says it will invest more than $14 million in prevention initiatives.

  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The death toll of the novel coronavirus that originated in Wuhan, China, has killed over 2000, and the virus has infected more than 75,000 people.

On January 30, the World Health Organization (WHO) officially declared it a global health emergency.

The outbreak originated in Wuhan, China in December, and spread to 27 countries. Experts are now calling it a "mild pandemic," and theorizing that it could become a permanent virus that humans face, akin to the seasonal flu.

As people adapt to life under quarantine and preventative measures, ridesharing app DiDi Chuxing has taken some precautions of its own, and partially filled the void left under the quarantine and public transportation shutdown.

Officials quarantined Wuhan, shutting down all public transportation on January 23.

Wuhan China January 26 coronavirus medics help man
Wuhan China January 26 coronavirus medics help man

Getty Images

Trains and planes were no longer allowed into or out of the city, and roadblocks stopped cars from exiting, too. As many as 50 million people, in Wuhan and 15 other cities, were told not to leave. According to CNN, 780 million people in China, more than half the population, are living under some kind of travel restriction.

DiDi is a ride-hailing service in China, of which Uber owns about a 15% stake. The company is valued at $62 billion as of July 2019.

Didi Chuxing
Didi Chuxing

Carlos Jasso/Reuters

Source: Business Insider

On February 18, DiDi started a program to install protective sheets as dividers in ride-sharing vehicles across China. The sheets are intended to "prevent droplet transmission of COVID-19" according to a press release.

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Didi

DiDi

DiDi has already rolled out the use of these protective sheets in Wuhan, Shenzen, and other cities under the guidance of medical professionals. The company says that it will spend $14.3 million on preventative measures.

Didi
Didi

DiDi

Though regular service in Wuhan has been suspended, it's operating as usual in the rest of China, except for long, inter-city rides.

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didi2

DiDi

According to a spokesperson, DiDi put together a fleet of more than 1300 drivers to offer transportation for all hospital staff in Wuhan.

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didi3

DiDi

It also has special fleets in four other cities, transporting more than 17,000 medical workers.

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didi4e

DiDi

DiDi has distributed masks, disinfectant, and other protective gear to drivers in 100 cities in China, a spokesperson told Business Insider.

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didi5

DiDi

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