China delays production of self-driving cars
Published: 03:12 PM,Dec 23,2025 | EDITED : 07:12 PM,Dec 23,2025
Early this year, Chinese automakers enthusiastically announced that they would soon be mass-producing and selling self-driving vehicles.
Most of those plans have now been delayed after a deadly crash that drew broad public attention.
China’s regulators finally gave the go-ahead last week to only two of the nine automakers that had submitted plans to sell self-driving cars.
And the approvals by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology were narrowly tailored to allow little more than further testing, not mass production.
Beijing Automotive Group and Changan Automobile in Chongqing will be allowed to operate self-driving taxis on three stretches of highway in each company’s hometown, the ministry said and the taxis will not be allowed to change lanes while under computer control. On any other road, the taxis will need to be under the control of a driver.
The limited programmes represent a recognition by the Chinese government that objectives set nearly five years ago, to begin mass production for sale to the general public by the end of this year, were too ambitious.
China’s regulators began to pull back after a crash of a Xiaomi SU7 in late March killed three women, all university students. News of previous accidents involving assisted driving had been suppressed by China’s censors.
But news of the March crash, on a highway in central China’s Anhui province, spread quickly and widely.
Questions swirled over whether drivers or automakers could be held legally responsible for such crashes.
According to Xiaomi, the car was moving at 72 mph in assisted-driving mode when it detected that its lane had been closed because of construction.
The car issued an audible warning: “Please be aware of obstacles ahead”. The driver took control of the vehicle, which crashed one second later into a concrete barrier, according to the company.
The public discussion of the tragedy prompted China’s Ministry of Public Security to get involved.
The ministry issued a statement warning that the assisted-driving technology available on mass-produced cars in China was not the same as fully automated driving. It warned motorists against having conversations that might distract them.
“The risky behaviour of playing with mobile phones, sleeping, chatting and eating after turning on the assisted-driving function not only violates road traffic safety laws and regulations, but also poses serious threat to the safety of other road users”, the ministry said.
Three levels of assisted or driverless technology are being debated in China.
So-called Level 2 technology helps steer the car, but drivers are required to keep their hands on the wheel and eyes on the road. This is already widely available in China, including on the SU7 that crashed.
But a report aired by state television last summer found that none of the domestic manufacturers’ systems were as reliable as those of Tesla, the American automaker that is popular in China.
Under Level 3 technology, drivers do not need to keep their hands on the wheel and eyes on the road, but must be in the driver’s seat and ready to take control of the car.
Level 4 involves robot taxis with no drivers at all; passengers sit in the back seat and may be blocked by a partition from even reaching the empty front seats.
More than a dozen Chinese cities, notably Wuhan, are testing robot taxis.
Days before the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology approved the two limited taxi services for Level 3, Geely Auto, China’s second-largest automaker, had tried to reassure regulators and the Chinese public about traffic safety. On December 12, Geely opened the world’s largest automotive safety testing centre in Ningbo.
Jerry Gan, CEO of Geely, said his company had already begun shipping some of its Zeekr cars with the hardware needed for Level 3 operations.
“This represents the highest safety standard for assisted driving for the L3 era”, he said.
China’s state-run television followed the Xiaomi crash with a report in July that was widely viewed on Chinese internet.
Tests of Level 2 technology on 36 car models from 20 brands had found that slightly fewer than half the cars could safely avoid a crash when they encountered trucks near a construction site at night, the report stated.
Only the two Tesla models in the test had assisted-driving systems that were reliable in a wide range of safety situations.
— The New York Times