WUHU CITY (DM)— China has deployed life-sized AI-powered ‘robocops’ to police roads and direct traffic around the clock.
Wearing reflective vests and white caps, the humanoid officers have been spotted patrolling Wuhu City, in eastern China’s Anhui Province, barking orders at civilians.
‘For your safety, please ride bicycles in the non-motorized lane,’ one robot was heard calling out to a cyclist who veered into traffic.

The robots‘ futuristic appearance has made them local celebrities, with pedestrians frequently pausing to snap photos.
Traffic police officer Jiang Zihao described the machines as ‘new colleagues’ capable of assisting officers on the streets.
According to Jiang, the AI-enabled robot – known as Intelligent Police Unit R001 – is linked to the city’s traffic signal system and can perform traffic-control gestures in sync with changing lights.

Equipped with high-definition cameras and an intelligent voice-broadcasting system, the robot uses advanced algorithms to automatically detect traffic violations by pedestrians and non-motorized vehicles and deliver on-the-spot warnings.
Beyond fixed post duties, the robot is fully mobile, able to autonomously travel to designated locations on command.
It can also identify illegal parking and conduct real-time road monitoring.

‘The robot can work around the clock,’ Jiang said, noting that it is expected to ease the workload of the police, especially during peak hours or in extreme weather conditions.
This ‘RoboCop’ is only the latest addition to China’s expanding fleet of AI-powered traffic assistants.
Last year, several Chinese cities began integrating robotic officers into daily policing.

In June, the southwestern city of Chengdu in Sichuan Province deployed a team of robot police officers, including quadruped robots, wheeled robots and humanoid robots, to patrol the streets alongside human counterparts.
In December, an AI-powered traffic policing robot was also put on duty in Hangzhou, in east China’s Zhejiang Province.
The deployment of these robots highlights China’s broader effort to integrate embodied intelligence and other cutting-edge technologies into real-world applications.

A report from the Development Research Center of the State Council projects that the market scale of China’s burgeoning embodied intelligence industry will reach 400 billion yuan (about 57.1 billion US dollars) in 2030 and exceed 1 trillion yuan in 2035.
‘Only by bringing products into real-life scenarios and collecting real operational data can we achieve rapid iteration,’ said Zhang Guibing, general manager of AiMOGA Robotics, the manufacturer of ‘Intelligent Police Unit R001.’
Zhang added that the company’s robots had already been deployed in more than 100 scenarios, including reception, security patrols and public services.
By OLIVIA ALLHUSEN/Daily Mail

