Recently, China’s Ministry of Public Security released a draft of the updated National Safety Technical Requirements for Motor Vehicle Operation.
✅ One highlight is drawing major attention:
Passenger cars, upon every startup, must default to an acceleration mode no faster than 5 seconds from 0 to 100 km/h.
In other words, even if a vehicle is capable of a super-fast launch, its default setting must not exceed this acceleration threshold.
Why this matters:
• It reflects growing concerns around road safety as high-performance EVs and sports cars become more common.
• It signals a regulatory shift toward managing vehicle performance through software, not just hardware.
• It may reshape how automakers calibrate power delivery, especially in China – the world’s largest auto market.
Whether this becomes a final standard remains to be seen, but one thing is clear:
Software-defined vehicles mean performance itself is becoming a configurable, and now regulated parameter.
✍️ What do you think? Is it necessary for safety, or too restrictive for innovation?
China Proposes New Limit: No Passenger Car Should Do 0–100 km/h Faster Than 5 Seconds
Category: News