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Chinese Lidar Maker Faces U.S. Defense Blacklist While Expanding Commercial Tech Partnerships

1h ago · July 8, 2026 · 3 min read

Why It Matters

Hesai Technology, a Shanghai-based sensor manufacturer blacklisted by the U.S. Department of Defense as a national security threat, has deepened partnerships with major American technology and autonomous vehicle companies, creating tension between military-focused export restrictions and commercial innovation in artificial intelligence and self-driving systems.

What Happened

The Department of Defense designated Hesai as a Chinese military entity in 2024, blocking the company from securing Pentagon contracts as part of a broader blacklist that includes 187 other firms and subsidiaries. Despite the designation, U.S. companies may legally incorporate Hesai’s lidar sensors—which use light detection and ranging to create three-dimensional maps—into nonmilitary applications.

The blacklist has not prevented Hesai from expanding its commercial footprint. In January, Nvidia announced an expanded partnership with Hesai at the Consumer Electronics Show, making Hesai sensors an available option for automakers building autonomous vehicle platforms on Nvidia’s architecture. The expanded relationship reflects Nvidia’s strong performance in automotive technology: the company reported a 39 percent increase in automotive revenue for fiscal year 2026 compared to the prior year.

Hesai’s sensors are already integrated into autonomous vehicle systems developed by Amazon’s Zoox, Waabi, Kodiak, Nuro, and Agtonomy. The company’s technology has also found applications outside the vehicle sector, including passenger and traffic flow monitoring at John F. Kennedy International Airport and autonomous lawn mowers.

Hesai co-founder and CEO David Li has disputed the military designation, saying in public remarks, “In the DOD case, I don’t feel there is sufficient evidence, and it’s not logical. We are frustrated by that.” Li stated that Hesai sensors lack the memory capacity to store data, suggesting the devices cannot serve as covert surveillance tools.

By the Numbers

187 — number of additional companies and subsidiaries on the DOD blacklist alongside Hesai

39% — increase in Nvidia’s automotive revenue for fiscal 2026 versus the prior year

2024 — year the Department of Defense designated Hesai as a Chinese military entity

Zoom Out

The Hesai case reflects a broader policy challenge facing U.S. regulators: how to manage national security risks in critical technologies while allowing domestic companies to compete in fast-growing commercial markets. Lidar sensors are central to autonomous vehicle development, a sector where American and Chinese firms compete for both domestic and global market share.

The blacklist mechanism, which bars companies from federal procurement and certain technology transfers, is blunt—it does not restrict private commercial use of foreign-designed components in civilian applications. This creates a gap between military procurement security and the open commercial supply chain that feeds the autonomous vehicle industry.

Hesai has disclosed in Securities and Exchange Commission filings that the Chinese government maintains “significant oversight in regulating our operations,” a standard disclosure for Chinese companies but one that underscores the difficulty of separating commercial technology development from state influence in China’s corporate structure.

What’s Next

The regulatory question surrounding Hesai will likely persist as autonomous vehicle adoption accelerates and supply chain dependencies deepen. Policymakers will face pressure to either expand restrictions on Chinese sensor suppliers in civilian applications or accept the national security trade-offs inherent in relying on foreign components for critical infrastructure and transportation technologies. The Nvidia-Hesai partnership suggests the commercial sector is moving forward despite the blacklist designation.

Last updated: Jul 8, 2026 at 11:31 AM GMT+0000 · Sources available
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