More than 150 Chinese companies are making humanoid robots, but a market bubble risks forming in the rapidly growing sector, a Beijing official has warned.
Government support and strong supply chains are helping Chinese firms push ahead in the race to develop AI-powered robots that could one day perform everyday tasks.
But the sector risks overcapacity as production scales up quickly without actual orders, Goldman Sachs warned recently.
On Thursday, Chinese official Li Chao told a National Development and Reform Commission briefing: “‘Speed’ and ‘bubble’ have always been issues that need grasping and balance in the development of frontier industries.”
She added that “the same goes for the humanoid robot industry,” in response to a question about bubble concerns.
The remarks mirror wider fears of a market crash fueled by frenzied investment in artificial intelligence technology worldwide.
“In recent years, driven by innovation and increased demand, humanoid robotics representing the scale of the embodied intelligence industry is seeing explosive growth,” Li said Thursday.
But the sector is not yet mature in terms of technology, commercialization, or use, she cautioned.
More than half of China’s 150 humanoid robot companies — a figure still increasing — are “startups or ‘cross-industry’ entrants, which is a good thing for innovation,” Li said.
“But we must also be vigilant in preventing products that are highly repetitive from ‘gathering’ in the market, squeezing research and development space and other risks.”
An April report published by Leaderobot, a specialist consulting firm, predicted that China’s humanoid robotics industry would reach 82 billion yuan ($11.6 billion) in 2025, accounting for half of global sales.
Large-scale, real-life use cases remain elusive, but ambitious trials have grabbed headlines.
A robot made by Shanghai’s AgiBot set a Guinness World Record this month for the longest reported distance walked by a humanoid machine, completing a three-day, 100-kilometer (62-mile) trek.
Beijing also hosted the world’s first humanoid robot games in August, where more than 500 “athletes” competed in disciplines ranging from basketball to competitive cleaning.