China's robot makers chase Tesla to deliver humanoid workers
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[August 23, 2024] By
Qiaoyi Li and Kevin Krolicki
BEIJING (Reuters) - China dominates the market for electric vehicles.
Now it's chasing Tesla in the race to build battery-powered humanoids
expected to replace human workers building EVs on assembly lines.
At the World Robot Conference this week in Beijing, over two dozen
Chinese companies showed off humanoid robots designed to work in
factories and warehouses, with even more displaying the made-in-China
precision parts needed to build them.
China's push into the emerging industry draws from the formula behind
its initial EV drive more than a decade ago: government support,
ruthless price competition from a wide field of new entrants and a deep
supply chain.
"China's humanoid robot industry demonstrates clear advantages in
supply-chain integration (and) mass production capabilities," said Arjen
Rao, analyst at China-based LeadLeo Research Institute.
The robotics effort is backed by President Xi Jinping's policy of
developing "new productive forces" in technology – a point made in
brochures for this week's event.
The city of Beijing launched a $1.4 billion state-backed fund for
robotics in January, while Shanghai announced in July plans to set up a
$1.4 billion humanoid industry fund.
The robots on display this week draw from some of the same domestic
suppliers that rode the EV wave, including battery and sensor
manufacturers.
Goldman Sachs forecast in January the annual global market for humanoid
robots would reach $38 billion by 2035, with nearly 1.4 million
shipments for consumer and industrial applications. It estimated the
cost of materials to build them had fallen to about $150,000 each in
2023, excluding research and development costs.
"There is big room to squeeze the cost down," said Hu Debo, CEO of
Shanghai Kepler Exploration Robotics, a company he co-founded last year
inspired by Tesla's humanoid robot Optimus.
"China specialises in fast iteration and production."
Hu's company is working on its fifth version of a worker robot to trial
in factories. He expects the sales price to be less than $30,000.
'CATFISH EFFECT' COMES TO ROBOTS
When Tesla opened its Shanghai factory in 2019, Chinese officials said
they expected the EV pioneer would have a "catfish effect" on China's
industry: introducing a large competitor that would make Chinese rivals
swim faster.
Tesla's Optimus robot has had a similar effect, Hu said.
The U.S. automaker first introduced Optimus in 2021, which CEO Elon Musk
then touted as potentially "more significant than the vehicle business
over time".
Musk's company is using an artificial intelligence approach for Optimus
modelled on its "Full Self-Driving" software for EVs. Chinese rivals and
analysts say Tesla has an early lead in AI, but China has the ability to
drive down the price of production.
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A visitor looks at humanoid robots displayed at the Institute of
Automation, Chinese Academy of Sciences booth during the World Robot
Conference in Beijing, China August 21, 2024. REUTERS/Florence
Lo/File Photo
Tesla showed off Optimus, mannequin-like, standing in a plexiglass
box next to a Cybertruck at an exhibition alongside the conference
in Beijing this week.
Optimus was outdone by many Chinese humanoids that were waving,
walking or even shrugging, but it was still one of the most popular
exhibits and thronged with people taking photos.
"Next year there will be more than 1,000 of my compatriots in the
factory," a sign next to Optimus said.
Tesla, in a statement, reiterated it expected to move beyond
prototypes to start producing Optimus in small volumes next year.
ROBOTS ON THE ASSEMBLY LINE
Hong Kong-listed UBTECH Robotics has also been testing its robots in
car factories. It started with Geely and announced a deal on
Thursday to test them at an Audi plant in China.
"By next year our goal is going to mass manufacturing," said
Sotirios Stasinopoulos, UBTECH's project manager.
That would mean up to 1,000 robots working in factories, he said.
"It is the first milestone towards a large-scale deployment."
UBTECH uses Nvidia chips in its robots but more than 90% of
components are from China.
The current generation of production robots - massive arms capable
of welding and other tasks - has been led mostly by companies
outside China, including Japan's Fanuc, Swiss engineering group ABB
and Germany's Kuka, owned by Chinese home appliance manufacturer
Midea.
China leads the world with factory-installed production robots, more
than triple the number in North America, according to the
International Federation of Robotics.
Xin Guobin, China's vice-minister for industry and information
technology, said at the opening of the Beijing event that his
ministry had been implementing Xi's guidance and had made China "an
important force in the global robot industry."
The country last November called for mass production of humanoid
robots by 2025, but that will start on a much smaller scale than is
needed to transform EV production.
"I believe that it is likely to be at least 20 to 30 years before
humanoid robots can achieve large-scale commercial application,"
said LeadLeo Research Institute's Rao.
(Reporting by Qiaoyi Li and Kevin Krolicki in Beijing; Editing by
Jamie Freed)
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