
Why China's robot makers are unfazed by US tariffs: ‘we're the only supplier'
Advertisement
The robotic cafe has already racked up orders worth 8 million yuan (US$1.1 million) over the first two days of the Canton Fair in Guangzhou – more than its makers had dared to expect.
'To our surprise, the enthusiasm from buyers this year has been overwhelming,' said Han Zhaolin, the founder of Dolphin Robot Technology. 'Buyers from Vietnam to the Middle East showed a strong willingness to purchase on site.'
Han's team had been uncertain about how the escalating US-China trade war – which has seen both sides
raise tariffs on each other's goods by over 120 per cent – would affect sales. But in the end, he had little to worry about.
As a fifth-generation product, which boasts nearly 100 patents, the firm's robotic cafe faces little international competition, Han said. That has allowed the firm to hold firm in the face of rising US duties.
Advertisement
'We aren't bearing the tariff, nor are we lowering our prices, because US customers have rigid demand,' he said. 'There's nothing like this produced in the US, Germany or Japan, and similar products from South Korea cost twice as much.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


RTHK
an hour ago
- RTHK
Gilgeous-Alexander agrees record contract extension
Gilgeous-Alexander agrees record contract extension The deal gives Gilgeous-Alexander the highest annual salary in NBA history. File photo: Reuters Oklahoma City Thunder star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has agreed a four-year US$285 million contract extension, the richest per-year contract in NBA history, according to US media reports. Gilgeous-Alexander, who guided the Thunder to the NBA championship last month after a campaign that saw him win regular season and finals Most Valuable Player awards, is now tied to the club through 2031. The 26-year-old Canadian point guard has two years remaining on his existing contract with Oklahoma City worth US$79.1 million. The four additional seasons of his contract extension will see him receive US$62.5 million, US$68.6 million, US$73.7 million and then US$78.7 million in 2030-2031. The deal gives Gilgeous-Alexander the highest annual salary in the NBA, eclipsing the average US$64.3 million salary of the Philadelphia 76ers' Joel Embiid and the US$62.8 million earned by the Boston Celtics' Jayson Tatum. Gilgeous-Alexander was the fulcrum of the Thunder's dazzling 68-win Western Conference season, before inspiring the team to a 4-3 NBA Finals victory over the Indiana Pacers last month. The Thunder ace averaged a league-high 32.7 points during the regular season and 30.3 points in the NBA Finals on his way to completing his MVP double. He became only the fourth player in history to win both NBA regular season and finals MVP awards as well as the league's scoring title, putting him into an exclusive club alongside Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Michael Jordan and Shaquille O'Neal. (AFP)


The Standard
3 hours ago
- The Standard
US stocks mixed as Trump tax bill advances, Tesla falls
Nike plans to reduce reliance on China production for US market to soften tariff blow


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong must ensure a quality AI education is available to all
Hong Kong's inaugural Digital Education Week is a landmark effort to accelerate a digital transformation in education and cultivate students' digital literacy. More than a tech showcase, it is a call to action for educators, policymakers and communities to engage deeply with the discussion on what a quality technical education means in the artificial intelligence (AI) era. Advertisement This is an opportunity for Hong Kong to reaffirm its commitment to setting a global example of responsible AI integration in education. Having spent over a decade navigating the complex terrain of global education policy, I have seen how technological waves reshape classrooms and societies alike. AI is no longer a distant promise but an immediate force transforming how we teach and learn. This transformation demands a paradigm shift in pedagogy , where critical thinking, ethical reasoning and creativity become central to the curriculum, preparing students not just to use AI, but to question and shape it. AI's transformative potential is undeniable. Its ability to personalise learning, provide real-time feedback and free teachers from routine tasks can revolutionise education. Yet AI's benefits are not guaranteed – they depend on the deliberate choices societies make. Without thoughtful policies, AI risks deepening inequalities and concentrating advantages among a privileged few. This risk is especially acute in a city like Hong Kong, where wealth disparity is severe. Oxfam Hong Kong revealed a poverty rate of 20.2 per cent in the first quarter of last year, with over 1.39 million people living in poverty. Meanwhile, the poorest 10 per cent of households earn 81.9 times less than the richest 10 per cent – a stark increase from 34.3 times in 2019. Advertisement Such divides translate directly into unequal access to digital tools and AI-enabled learning opportunities, which threatens to widen the education gap. To prevent AI from becoming another driver of social exclusion, Hong Kong must adopt inclusive policies that ensure equitable access to a quality AI education.