China’s 153,000 Robot Rental Firms Face Cooling Demand as Beijing Pushes 100 Deployment Scenarios
Updated
Updated · CNN · Jun 30
China’s 153,000 Robot Rental Firms Face Cooling Demand as Beijing Pushes 100 Deployment Scenarios
2 articles · Updated · CNN · Jun 30
Summary
China’s humanoid robot rental boom is losing steam as prices slide and operators report novelty fatigue, even after a surge that spawned more than 153,000 rental businesses.
Daily rentals still run about 3,000-3,500 yuan, but most machines need human operators and remain better suited to exhibitions, proposals and staged performances than factory or household work.
At Beijing training sites, more than 120 humanoids repeat tasks under handheld supervision, underscoring shortages of physical-world data and hardware limits such as costly, fragile dexterous hands.
Beijing is still accelerating deployment, launching a national plan this month to place humanoids in more than 100 high-value application scenarios by year-end as it bets on productivity gains and tech leadership.
China has more than 140 humanoid makers and leads global deliveries, but industrial use remains limited—Unitree says factory deployments are under 10%—raising bubble concerns and pointing to eventual industry consolidation.