
Chinese authorities have suspended new licenses for autonomous vehicles following a major technical failure in Wuhan where over 100 of Baidu's Apollo Go robotaxis abruptly stalled. The mass outage was reportedly caused by a cloud service anomaly that severed communication, leaving vehicles immobilized in traffic and sparking significant safety concerns. In response, three government ministries have mandated a nationwide safety audit and are pushing for stricter regulations, including a requirement for onboard fallback systems that allow cars to navigate without a network connection. This regulatory freeze has pressured the stock prices of Baidu and its rivals, Pony AI and WeRide, as the industry faces a shift toward more cautious oversight. Despite the halt, companies like Nokia and ImmunityBio continue to report progress in unrelated technological and pharmaceutical sectors. Ultimately, the incident marks a transition for China’s self-driving market from aggressive expansion to a resilience-first governance model ahead of mandatory 2027 safety standards.
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