During the past three years, China became an epicenter of “intelligent driving” innovations. OEMs raced to outdo each other in capabilities like L2+, L2++, highway NOA (Navigation on Autopilot), and increasingly ambitious urban autonomous functions. Momentum was palpable as investment flowed, recruitment surged, and suppliers—particularly in perception, compute, and domain controllers—geared up to support assisted driving. Then, on March 29, 2025, it came to a tragic halt.
The Xiaomi SU7 Crash
The incident that triggered this wave of regulatory reform occurred in Tongling, involving Xiaomi's SU7 electric sedan that had been on the market for just one year.
According to black box data and traffic camera footage, the vehicle was traveling on an elevated highway with assisted driving (NOA) engaged. The driver canceled assisted driving and resumed manual control. The vehicle, reportedly traveling at 97 km/h (60 mph), veered into a barrier. Soon after, a fire broke out, and three passengers died during the accident.
The crash raised difficult questions: Did the system disengage cleanly? Were there design or UI flaws in the handover? Was the driver aware of what the system could and couldn’t do? Were there problems exiting the cabin? No firm conclusions have been made public, but reaction from regulators was swift.
Sweeping Reset on Autonomous Marketing
Two weeks after the crash, China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) announced new policies that alter the commercial landscape for assisted driving technologies:
This significantly reorients the regulatory tone in China.
Pause in Intelligent Driving Activities
What makes the shift especially dramatic is the pace at which the L2+ landscape had grown in China:
This sudden policy change affects much of that progress—at least in its current form. It effectively resets the narrative from feature competition to safety-first compliance.
Implications for Suppliers, OEMs, and Market Strategy
From the vantage point of a supplier or partner in this evolving market, there are practical takeaways:
A Local Incident with Global Ramifications
While the Xiaomi crash and new MIIT policy are localized to China, the ripple effects will be felt globally. China is not only the largest car market, it’s the proving ground for rapid software and sensor integration. If suppliers can’t adapt to new compliance requirements there, it may undermine competitiveness elsewhere, particularly as regulators in Europe and North America take note of China’s assertive stance.
Moreover, this signals a broader industry challenge: how to responsibly scale advanced driving features while maintaining transparency, control, and user safety. The race for "more autonomy" has officially entered its regulatory phase.
✍️ A Wake-Up Call Worth Heeding
The MIIT’s new policies are not just a response to one crash—they are a turning point in the narrative around what it means to commercialize intelligent driving safely.
For the global automotive sector, this is a moment to pause and recalibrate not just the tech stack, but the strategy and the culture of deployment. What happens next in China will shape how the rest of the world moves forward.
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