A local government in Shenzhen just did something no government on Earth has done before. On March 7, 2026, the Longgang District released "Several Measures to Support OpenClaw and One-Person Company Development." Ten policies. Public funding. Real money, going directly to developers building on OpenClaw.
They drafted the whole thing in three weeks.
What the Ten Policies Actually Include
The subsidies aren't vague promises. Here's what Longgang is putting on the table:
Computing power: Three months free for new OPC (One-Person Company) enterprises. Code contributions: Up to 2 million yuan (roughly $290,000) for contributing core code to OpenClaw. Deployment vouchers: 40% reimbursement on deployment costs, capped at 2 million yuan per company per year. AI model access: 30% subsidy on API fees, up to 1 million yuan annually.
And it gets bigger. Seed-stage OPC startups can receive equity investment up to 10 million yuan ($1.46 million). Demonstration projects get up to 4 million yuan. There are relocation bonuses, 18 months of discounted office space, and hackathon prizes up to 500,000 yuan.
"Hundreds of enterprises consulted overnight" after the policy dropped, according to Chinese media reports.
The One-Person Company Model
OPC is the real story here. One founder, no employees, running an entire business on OpenClaw agents. This concept dominated China's "Two Sessions" political meetings, and Shenzhen is betting public money that it works.
Nearly 1,000 people queued at Tencent headquarters just for free OpenClaw installation. That's not hype. That's demand.
Beijing Bans It, Shenzhen Funds It
Here's where it gets interesting. On March 10 and 11, Beijing banned OpenClaw from government computers and state banks, citing security concerns. Meanwhile, Shenzhen was already spending millions subsidizing its development.
China is simultaneously treating OpenClaw as a national security risk and a strategic development priority. Both things, at the same time.
And Shenzhen isn't alone. Wuxi announced 12 support measures (up to 5 million yuan). Hefei countered with 15 measures and up to 10 million yuan. Suzhou, Shanghai Pudong, Wuhan, Hangzhou, Foshan, and Changshu have all followed.
What This Means for Global Users
Government subsidies validate commercial viability. When multiple Chinese cities commit public funding to OpenClaw infrastructure, that's a signal about where the technology is headed.
But those subsidies target domestic companies. If you're outside China, the money doesn't reach you. What does reach you: managed hosting with any LLM provider, European data sovereignty through Hetzner, and zero dependence on any government's policy decisions.
The lobbying is their problem. Building with OpenClaw is yours.