WeRide Halts Dubai Robotaxi Fleet Amid Escalating Iran Conflict

Violent Middle East relations have thrown down the speed limiters on the ambition of the robotaxi in China. Autonomous driving leader We Ride has just halted its whole collection in Dubai as the conflict between the U.S. and Israel with Iran is going out of hand, thus interrupting the rise of the ride-hailing enterprise in the Gulf.

Gulf’s Robotaxi Hotspot

The Gulf region has become a commercially viable market for Chinese pioneers of robotaxi. We Ride, which has been providing services in the region since 2021, is attracted by relatively relaxed regulatory regimes and the continuously increasing demand, with Dubai alone recording a 25% annual growth in ride-hailing journeys in 2025.

This January, Baidu Apollo Go started its commercial business in Abu Dhabi, and Pony.ai tested in Doha and Dubai. All of these businesses envision having about 1,200 robotaxis in the region by 2027 and tens of thousands by 2030, as per industry estimates. However, We Ride has not discontinued its fleets in Abu Dhabi and Riyadh, which are still running their public rides.

Safety First Amid Chaos

The safety of the staff is of the most important concern. We Ride instructed all regional workers to work at home, a factor that reduced the risk of Iranian drone attacks on its hubs, including Dubai airport and the destruction of American jets in its neighboring country of Kuwait.

The Apollo Go of Baidu is flexible in its operations and says, we are modifying services as required in close collaboration with local regulators. Pony.ai had earlier suspended tests in Dubai but started operations in Doha on Monday, and planned to reopen at an appropriate time. The trend is indicative of the larger regional spillovers, 30,000 displaced human beings in Lebanon, and the IAEA whistle blown attacks in the Natanz building.

Market Ripples and Analysis

We Ride NASDAQ: WRD, Baidu 9888.HK and Pony.ai PONY.O all saw their stocks fall 3-5% in reaction to the news, signs that investors are now worried about a Gulf exposure which today takes 15% of their global robotaxi-based revenues.

According to Tu Le, an analyst with Sino Auto Insights, geopolitical shocks reveal the weakness of autonomous vehicle development in high-growth markets with high instability. The activities of Iran are pushing the air defense of the U.S. thin, but the Gulf states are quickly enhancing their interceptors.

Path Forward

Robotaxi services will resume when tensions in the region decrease. Once a ceasefire is in place, companies plan a careful restart with added safety measures. If stability returns by late 2026, the industry might regain momentum.

However, firms should not rely only on the Gulf market, since potential renewed conflict could cause at least a 10-15% setback in 2027 forecasts.

Dr Layloma Rashid

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