by Emmitt Barry, with reporting from Washington D.C. Bureau Staff
BEIJING (Worthy News) – A Chinese technology company has announced bold plans to release what it calls the world’s first gestation robot–a humanoid machine designed to carry a baby in an artificial womb embedded within its abdomen.
Kaiwa Technology, based in Guangzhou, says the prototype will be ready within a year and could hit the market by 2026 at a price below 100,000 yuan (around $13,900). Founder Zhang Qifeng, who is also affiliated with Nanyang Technological University, presented the project at the 2025 World Robot Conference in Beijing, where it sparked widespread debate over science, ethics, and human dignity.
Humanoid Birth Machine
The robot is envisioned as a life-sized humanoid with a transparent abdominal chamber functioning as an artificial womb. A fetus would grow inside a fluid-filled sac, receiving nutrients through a tube system designed to mimic natural pregnancy.
“It is not merely an incubator but a life-sized humanoid equipped with an artificial womb in its abdomen, capable of replicating the entire process from conception to delivery,” Zhang told Chinese media.
Zhang claimed the technology is already mature in lab conditions but requires integration into a humanoid form for “human-robot interaction” during pregnancy. He also said proposals have been submitted to Guangdong provincial authorities for policy and legal approval.
Scientific Basis and Obstacles
Artificial womb experiments are not entirely new. In 2017, researchers at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia successfully kept a premature lamb alive for four weeks inside a so-called “biobag,” where it grew wool and developed normally. But such systems have only supported partial gestation, functioning more like neonatal incubators.
Zhang’s claim–that his robot could sustain life from conception through birth–remains unproven. Critics note that such a leap would require solving immense challenges in fertilization, implantation, and long-term fetal development.
Ethical Storm
The proposal has ignited heated discussions worldwide. Advocates hail it as a breakthrough for couples struggling with infertility, while critics warn of commodifying human life. Christian leaders and pro-life advocates argue that the technology risks treating children as manufactured products rather than God-given blessings.
Scripture reminds believers that children are “a heritage of the Lord” (Psalm 127:3), a truth that machines cannot replicate, no matter how advanced. For many, the pregnancy robot raises more profound questions about whether humanity is attempting to play God by replacing natural motherhood with robotic surrogacy.
AI Breeding Factories
The World Robot Conference also showcased another headline-grabbing innovation: the GEAIR robot, an AI-powered system developed by the Chinese Academy of Sciences to cross-pollinate crops and accelerate hybrid seed production. Researchers say the technology could revolutionize agriculture by dramatically cutting breeding cycles and boosting yields.
Together, these innovations reveal Beijing’s accelerating push to merge artificial intelligence with biotechnology — both in food production and, increasingly, in human life itself.
Copyright 1999-2025 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
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Chinese Tech Firm Unveils Plan for World’s First Pregnancy Robot

by Emmitt Barry, with reporting from Washington D.C. Bureau Staff
BEIJING (Worthy News) – A Chinese technology company has announced bold plans to release what it calls the world’s first gestation robot–a humanoid machine designed to carry a baby in an artificial womb embedded within its abdomen.
Kaiwa Technology, based in Guangzhou, says the prototype will be ready within a year and could hit the market by 2026 at a price below 100,000 yuan (around $13,900). Founder Zhang Qifeng, who is also affiliated with Nanyang Technological University, presented the project at the 2025 World Robot Conference in Beijing, where it sparked widespread debate over science, ethics, and human dignity.
Humanoid Birth Machine
The robot is envisioned as a life-sized humanoid with a transparent abdominal chamber functioning as an artificial womb. A fetus would grow inside a fluid-filled sac, receiving nutrients through a tube system designed to mimic natural pregnancy.
“It is not merely an incubator but a life-sized humanoid equipped with an artificial womb in its abdomen, capable of replicating the entire process from conception to delivery,” Zhang told Chinese media.
Zhang claimed the technology is already mature in lab conditions but requires integration into a humanoid form for “human-robot interaction” during pregnancy. He also said proposals have been submitted to Guangdong provincial authorities for policy and legal approval.
Scientific Basis and Obstacles
Artificial womb experiments are not entirely new. In 2017, researchers at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia successfully kept a premature lamb alive for four weeks inside a so-called “biobag,” where it grew wool and developed normally. But such systems have only supported partial gestation, functioning more like neonatal incubators.
Zhang’s claim–that his robot could sustain life from conception through birth–remains unproven. Critics note that such a leap would require solving immense challenges in fertilization, implantation, and long-term fetal development.
Ethical Storm
The proposal has ignited heated discussions worldwide. Advocates hail it as a breakthrough for couples struggling with infertility, while critics warn of commodifying human life. Christian leaders and pro-life advocates argue that the technology risks treating children as manufactured products rather than God-given blessings.
Scripture reminds believers that children are “a heritage of the Lord” (Psalm 127:3), a truth that machines cannot replicate, no matter how advanced. For many, the pregnancy robot raises more profound questions about whether humanity is attempting to play God by replacing natural motherhood with robotic surrogacy.
AI Breeding Factories
The World Robot Conference also showcased another headline-grabbing innovation: the GEAIR robot, an AI-powered system developed by the Chinese Academy of Sciences to cross-pollinate crops and accelerate hybrid seed production. Researchers say the technology could revolutionize agriculture by dramatically cutting breeding cycles and boosting yields.
Together, these innovations reveal Beijing’s accelerating push to merge artificial intelligence with biotechnology — both in food production and, increasingly, in human life itself.
Copyright 1999-2025 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
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