China

Intelligence for Better Decision Making

Shanghai Robotics Summit Showcases Breakthroughs in Humanoid Automation and Industry Investment
Dec. 11, 2025 | Technology & Innovation

The 2025 Global Developers Pioneers Summit and International Embodied Intelligence Skills Competition will gather industry leaders in Shanghai from December 12 to 14 to showcase and evaluate cutting-edge robotics in simulated real-world scenarios.

**The summit features six major tracks and 17 distinct events centered on embodied intelligence, with challenges spanning industrial production and life skills.**
Industrial tasks include moving goods and tightening screws, while life skill scenarios require robots to arrange flowers, fold clothes, and make coffee. These activities unfold in homes, hospitals, and disaster-relief environments, with judges assessing both technical performance and humanistic care.

**Aoyi Technology will supply 30 high-performance dexterous robot hands—critical for humanoid robots operating in complex urban and industrial settings.**
Aoyi’s technical team will provide on-site support as the hands undergo intensive testing, feeding operational lessons directly into future product iterations.

**Humanoid Robot (Shanghai) Co., Ltd. will enter its full-size general-purpose humanoid robot, Qinglong, in the home service track.**
Built on open-source hardware and software platforms, Qinglong will tackle tasks such as folding clothes and tidying tableware to reveal challenges in model generalization and robustness across varied domestic environments.

Shanghai Zhuoyide Robot Co., Ltd. will challenge its precision motion-control systems in the flower-arranging event, using performance data from the competition to advance research and development in high-precision robotic manipulation.

**In the industrial sector, Shanghai Kepler Robot Co., Ltd. will deploy its “blue-collar humanoid robot” team to demonstrate autonomous, flexible logistics handling.**
Key capabilities include dynamic environment adaptation, heavy-load management, dual-arm coordination, and extended operation hours supported by proprietary components and algorithms. Kepler views the competition as a stress test for its technology’s commercial viability.

**Qinglang Intelligent will present its XMAN-R1 service robot, backed by extensive deployment experience.**
In 2024, Qinglang holds a 22.7% share of the global commercial service-robot market, with over 100,000 units operating in more than 600 cities. The firm will use the competition to validate its robots’ reliability and practicality in complex, realistic scenarios.

**Rongtai Electric Material announced a USD 77 million investment to build a factory in Thailand producing insulation components for new energy vehicles and robotic parts by end of 2026.**
The facility will manufacture 14,000 tons of mica paper, 4,500 tons of mica products, and seven million sets of robotic components annually. After the announcement, Rongtai’s shares rose over 7% in early trading before closing up 1.1%, outperforming the Shanghai Composite Index. Rongtai already supplies mica insulation to Tesla, Volkswagen, BMW, and Mercedes-Benz, and in June acquired a 51% stake in Shanghai-based Dizi Precision Machinery—specialists in planetary roller screw products used in humanoid robots—positioning itself to enter the precision transmission component market for robotics.
China’s Chip Export Surge Drives Foreign Trade Rebound amid US Tariffs
Dec. 11, 2025 | Technology & Innovation

China’s chip industry is fueling export growth as broader foreign trade rebounds amid tensions with the United States.

**In November 2025, China recorded a 5.9 percent year-on-year increase in exports to USD 330.3 billion, reversing October’s 1.1 percent decline.**
Strong shipments of integrated circuits and automobiles, alongside a lower comparative base from the previous year, drove this export rebound. Imports rose 1.9 percent to USD 218.7 billion, bringing total foreign trade to USD 549 billion, a 4.3 percent year-on-year gain.

**Integrated circuits led sectoral growth with a 34 percent jump in export value, while car exports surged 53 percent compared with November 2024.**
Analysts attribute these gains to China’s ongoing manufacturing transformation and a global upswing in investment linked to artificial intelligence technologies.

**Exports to the United States plunged 28.6 percent to USD 33.8 billion, widening from October’s 25.2 percent drop, as US tariffs averaging 31 percent continued to curb shipments.**
By contrast, China expanded exports to other major markets: the European Union bought 14.8 percent more, Japan 4.3 percent more, and South Korea 1.9 percent more.

**Exports to ASEAN countries rose 8.2 percent to USD 58.1 billion, though growth slowed from October’s 11 percent increase.**
Observers link this deceleration to reduced re-exports following US tariff hikes on certain ASEAN member exports.

**In the first eleven months of 2025, China’s total foreign trade grew 2.9 percent to USD 5.7 trillion.**
Over the same period, exports climbed 5.4 percent to USD 3.4 trillion, while imports edged down 0.6 percent to USD 2.3 trillion.

Monitored Intelligence for China - Dec. 12, 2025


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World Bank raises China 2025 growth forecast by 0.4 percentage points

China Daily | English | News | Dec. 12, 2025 | UndeterminedEconomic Growth

The World Bank has raised its economic growth forecast for China in 2025 by 0.4 percentage points, reflecting a more optimistic outlook for the world's second-largest economy. This revision is attributed to supportive fiscal and monetary policies that have bolstered domestic consumption and investment.

Exports have also been sustained by demand from developing countries, contributing to the positive growth expectations. The World Bank emphasizes that China's future growth will increasingly rely on domestic demand rather than external factors.

Mara Warwick, division director for China, Mongolia, and Korea at the World Bank, highlighted the importance of short-term fiscal stimulus alongside structural reforms, particularly in the social protection system. She also called for a more predictable business environment to enhance confidence and support resilient, sustainable economic growth.

Crude oil output to hit 215m tons this year

China Daily | English | News | Dec. 12, 2025 | UndeterminedEnergy Prices

China's domestic crude oil output is expected to reach a record 215 million metric tons in 2025, reflecting the country's strengthened focus on energy self-reliance amid ongoing geopolitical tensions and global supply chain challenges. This growth culminates a period of robust exploration success and steady production increases during the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025), during which China added 105 million tons of new crude oil capacity. Offshore crude oil has driven over 60 percent of new petroleum output for five consecutive years.

Despite rapid development in clean energy, fossil fuels remain critical for energy security and system stability, with over 30 percent of oil and 37 percent of natural gas expected to come from ocean sources. China leads global investment in energy transition, accounting for 39 percent of the over $2 trillion invested worldwide in 2024. In natural gas, China has recorded year-on-year production growth of 10 billion cubic meters for nine straight years, solidifying its position as the world's fourth-largest producer, with output projected at 260 billion cubic meters in 2025—a 35 percent increase since the last five-year plan.

Cumulative proven reserves have increased substantially during the 14th Five-Year Plan, with oil reserves surpassing 7 billion tons and natural gas reserves exceeding 7 trillion cubic meters, marking roughly 40 percent growth compared to the prior period. The national oil and gas pipeline network now extends 195,000 kilometers, promoting a unified national grid. China’s oil and gas sector is entering a new phase of enhanced production efficiency and green development, aiming to establish a secure, resilient, and modernized energy system that supports national energy security and economic stability.

Japan’s attempts of remilitarization reignite doubts about its future direction, lead to new reckoning of its historical crimes: FM spokesperson

Global Times | English | News | Dec. 12, 2025 | Geopolitical Conflict and Disputes

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun criticized Japan's recent military expansion and efforts to amend its pacifist constitution, arguing that these moves fuel doubts about Japan's future and prompt renewed scrutiny of its historical war crimes. Guo highlighted Japan's shifts in security policy, including lifting bans on collective self-defense, easing weapons export restrictions, and pursuing counterattack capabilities, along with discussions about acquiring nuclear-powered submarines. These actions, coupled with a 13-year consecutive increase in defense spending, have heightened regional and international concern.

Guo also pointed to Japan's insufficient reflection on its World War II aggression, noting that many war criminals remained active in politics and the military post-war. He criticized visits by former Japanese officials to the Yasukuni Shrine, which honors Class-A war criminals, and efforts to revise history textbooks to downplay aggression. Guo claimed that Japanese militarism has never been fully eradicated and that right-wing factions focus on Japan's defeat rather than its responsibility for war.

Emphasizing Japan’s obligations under the 1945 Potsdam Proclamation and its Instrument of Surrender, Guo called for political and legal measures to restrict Japan's military capabilities and erase militaristic ideology. He urged the international community to remain vigilant against any attempts to revive Japanese militarism and to protect the post-World War II peace and security framework established by these agreements.

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