China Now Leads the World in Daily Robotaxi Rides
Baidu's Apollo Go and Pony.ai have overtaken Waymo in daily trip volume, marking a shift in the global autonomous vehicle race driven largely by policy differences.
画像クレジット: Lottie animation by Centre Robotics (LottieFiles Free, used with credit). · source
What just happened?
China has quietly become the world's largest robotaxi market. Combined daily rides from Baidu's Apollo Go and Pony.ai now exceed those completed by Waymo in the United States, according to reports from The Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg.
This is a significant milestone. For years, Waymo has been considered the global leader in autonomous ride-hailing, operating in cities like San Francisco and Phoenix with a fleet that has logged millions of miles. Now, Chinese operators have pulled ahead on the metric that matters most for commercial viability: how many people are actually using the service each day.
Why is China pulling ahead?
The answer lies primarily in policy, not technology.
Chinese cities have moved faster to permit large-scale robotaxi deployments. Local governments in cities like Wuhan, Beijing, and Shenzhen have granted expansive operating zones and streamlined approval processes. This has allowed companies like Baidu to scale rapidly, deploying hundreds of vehicles across multiple cities simultaneously.
In the United States, the regulatory picture is more fragmented. Each state, and often each city, sets its own rules for autonomous vehicle testing and deployment. Waymo has faced public opposition in San Francisco and regulatory hurdles in other markets. The result is slower geographic expansion, even as the underlying technology continues to mature.
Think of it like two runners with similar abilities, but one has a clear track while the other navigates an obstacle course. The obstacles are not insurmountable, but they slow the pace.
How do the services compare?
Both Waymo and the leading Chinese operators use similar technological approaches: lidar sensors, cameras, and sophisticated AI systems that interpret the driving environment in real time. The vehicles look different (Waymo uses modified Jaguar I-Pace SUVs, while Baidu often deploys purpose-built Apollo vehicles), but the core challenge is the same.
The user experience is also converging. Passengers in both countries hail rides through smartphone apps, and the vehicles navigate without human drivers. Pricing strategies vary, with Chinese operators often subsidizing rides heavily to build market share.
What does this mean for the industry?
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