China has officially launched a national program aimed at assigning a unique identification code to every humanoid robot produced within its borders.
This is a genuine digital identity card reserved specifically for bipedal machines, i.e., those systems capable of balancing and moving on two legs.
The initiative, named Humanoid Full Lifecycle Management Service Platform, was recently unveiled and is led by the committee for the standardization of humanoid robotics and embodied intelligence, an authority operating under the direct supervision of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology of China.
This legislation responds to an industrial growth that was progressing at a pace significantly higher than the relevant regulatory framework, making urgent the creation of a more robust control infrastructure.
Unique identifier for robots, China is the first

Far from being a simple serial number, the assigned code is structured into four distinct and strictly sequential sections, designed to store a large amount of data.
The first two digits indicate the national code, essential for tracking international shipments and sales abroad. The next four digits identify in an unequivocal way the manufacturing company.
The third section consists of six numbers that classify the specific model of the product. Finally, a long sequence of seventeen digits guarantees the uniqueness of each individual unit, distinguishing it from any other twin machine produced on the same assembly line.
The entire architecture of the code is designed to track the robot throughout its entire operational life, from the initial assembly in the factory to disposal and recycling of materials, involving manufacturers, service providers, vendors and end users in a unified production framework.
The numbers behind a rapid expansion
The reasons for such urgency lie in the current production and sales volumes. According to a study conducted by IDC and published in January, the global humanoid-robot market grew by 508% in just the last year.
About 18,000 units have been shipped worldwide, and Chinese companies are firmly at the forefront of this production race. The size of the domestic Asian sector is notable: currently over one hundred specialized manufacturing companies operate in the region.
Even before the public announcement of the new management system, more than 28,000 robots, distributed across about two hundred different models, had already received their digital identity.
Safety, accountability and standardization
The tracking system is not born as a mere surveillance tool, but as an essential element to ensure civil and contractual safety. Yu Xiuming, deputy director of the China Electronics Standardization Institute, emphasized that the platform was designed primarily to address issues related to sector governance.
By assigning a precise identity to each machine, authorities and consumers can clearly establish the responsibilities of the manufacturer in case of malfunctions or field incidents.
In short, it is a strictly necessary industrial standardization operation to prepare the ground for a global-scale commercial expansion, ensuring that the introduction of these advanced machines occurs in a regulated and transparent manner.



