The U.S. government should ban Chinese LiDAR sensors from its military equipment and other critical sectors, a Washington-based think tank said.
Light detection and ranging (LiDAR) sensors use lasers to scan the environment and transmit the data to create high-precision three-dimensional maps.
The technology has a wide range of civilian and military uses, from robotic cars and cranes to missile guidance systems.
In the memo, the FDD said LiDAR sensors use advanced processors that can hide malicious code or malware backdoors that are difficult to detect.
The malware embedded by “a malicious manufacturer under the control of an adversarial nation” in LiDAR systems could trigger or disable the sensors at any predetermined time, the foundation said.
With Chinese manufacturers dominating the global LiDAR market, the report said, Chinese-made sensors in the United States “often serve as essential nodes within interconnected public safety, transportation, and utility systems,” potentially making them vulnerable to Beijing’s espionage and sabotage, the report said.
The bulletin did not mention whether the company was state-owned or private. However, under Chinese law, all individuals, organizations, and institutions in China are obligated to support national intelligence work.
The document mentioned the Chinese regime’s “significant oversight and discretion over our business operation” and said that it “may influence or intervene in our operations at any time.”

A LiDAR sensor from the Hesai company on top of a “robotaxi” autonomous vehicle developed by Baidu Apollo as it drives along a street in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province, China, on July 10, 2022. Jade Gao/AFP via Getty Images
Hesai is currently suing the Department of Defense (DOD) for including it on a list of Chinese military companies. Hesai denied any connection with the Chinese communist regime or its military.
It also urged the Commerce Department’s Information and Communications Technology and Services unit to assess the risks of Chinese LiDARs and consider banning them from “critical infrastructure sectors such as transportation, energy grids, public safety, and defense systems.
Other recommendations include regulating LiDAR data usage, sector-specific cybersecurity standards for LiDAR systems in critical infrastructure, state-level procurement bans, and friend shore LiDAR supply chains.
The Epoch Times reached out to both the Commerce Department and Hesai for comment but received no responses by publication time.
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