China unveiled its 15th Five-Year Plan with an aggressive bid to dominate global technology and artificial intelligence by 2030, pledging to integrate AI across 90% of its economy and to bankroll advances in humanoid robots, AI operating systems, brain-computer interfaces, low-altitude aviation, quantum tech, nuclear fusion and 6G. Beijing is pairing heavy incentives and tax breaks with a push to keep most domestic AI models open-source to spur adoption and entrepreneurship—an approach that contrasts with largely proprietary U.S. systems.
The plan targets economic headwinds and a shrinking workforce by scaling automation and expanding “dark factories.” China already leads in industrial robot deployments and is ramping up humanoid production. Yet a critical vulnerability remains advanced chips: U.S. export controls continue to disrupt access, and analysts say China’s best domestically produced AI chips lag top U.S. hardware by a wide margin, complicating self-reliance goals. With Washington showing little inclination to relax constraints, the race will hinge on whether China can close the hardware gap while diffusing AI across traditional industries. The result could determine standards, supply chains and the balance of power in the next era of computing.
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