News-China-Freezes-Robotaxi-Licenses-2026
China's national regulators froze all new robotaxi operating licenses across the country on approximately April 29, 2026, following a high-profile incident in which dozens of Baidu's Apollo Go robotaxis simultaneously froze in traffic in Wuhan last month, causing widespread disruption and public alarm.[1][2]
The freeze represents Beijing's most significant regulatory intervention in the autonomous vehicle sector to date. China has been one of the world's most aggressive markets for robotaxi deployment, with Baidu's Apollo Go service operating in over 10 cities. The move signals that even China's permissive regulatory environment has limits when public safety concerns arise.[1]
Background
Baidu's Apollo Go had grown rapidly, with Wuhan becoming its largest operational hub. The fleet freeze incident, which occurred in approximately March 2026, involved dozens of vehicles becoming immobilized simultaneously due to a software malfunction, paralyzing sections of Wuhan's road network for hours.[1]
Significance
The freeze is likely to delay expansion plans for Baidu and competitors including Pony.ai, AutoX, and WeRide. It also creates an opening for U.S. and European regulators to point to China's caution as precedent for their own autonomous vehicle safety frameworks.[2]