Toyota and FANUC quietly co-develop a new generation of factory humanoid
A joint development agreement between Toyota and FANUC has the potential to reshape industrial humanoids in Asia. Neither company is saying much.
Bildnachweis: Photo by Lenny Kuhne on Unsplash · source
Two of the largest names in Japanese manufacturing have signed a joint development agreement for a factory humanoid. Toyota and FANUC are not saying very much. The shape of the deal still matters.
Nikkei Asia confirms the basics. The partnership will share intellectual property between the two companies and target Toyota plants as the initial deployment environment. Bloomberg frames the announcement as Japan's structured response to Tesla's Optimus programme.
We do not announce. We deliver. — FANUC executive (via Bloomberg)
Why this partnership makes sense
Toyota brings two things FANUC does not have. The first is decades of humanoid research, including the company's quiet but persistent programme since 2004. The second is the largest manufacturing footprint in Asia, which doubles as the most demanding test environment for any humanoid platform.
FANUC brings two things Toyota does not have. The first is the world's largest install base of industrial robotic arms, with the supplier, service, and integrator networks that come with it. The second is engineering specialisation in industrial-grade motion control that is difficult to acquire from outside.
The combination is, on paper, the strongest industrial humanoid programme in the world.
What it competes with
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