According to roboticsandautomationnews.com, Taiwan has launched the National Center for AI Robotics (NCAIR) alongside a $629 million government funding initiative to accelerate domestic robotics startups and strengthen industrial automation capabilities.
National Strategy for Robotics and AI
The NCAIR was formally inaugurated by Taiwan’s president Lai Ching-te as part of the broader “Ten AI Initiatives Promotion Plan.” The center operates under the National Institutes of Applied Research and is tasked with supporting the development, testing, and training of robotics technologies and talent. At the launch event, Lai emphasized the strategic importance of robotics, stating the center will play a central role in advancing domestic innovation and industrial competitiveness.
Funding Structure and Startup Targets
The government’s NT$20 billion ($629 million) funding program is scheduled to run from 2026 to 2029. According to Cryptopolitan, the initiative aims to support the creation of at least three new robotics startups during that period. This follows an earlier NT$10 billion ($331 million) subsidy program announced last year — part of a five-year national effort to stimulate robotics development.
Addressing Labor Shortages Through Automation
Taiwan’s robotics push is closely tied to demographic pressures: an aging population and declining workforce are driving policy toward automation, especially in healthcare, hospitality, and service industries. Earlier initiatives focused on robots for restaurants and healthcare settings; the new center places greater emphasis on home care robotics and machines capable of performing high-risk industrial tasks.
Global Context: Robot Density and Industrial Positioning
Taiwan already ranks among the world’s most automated economies. Data from the International Federation of Robotics shows the country has approximately 302 industrial robots per 10,000 employees, placing it in the global top 10. For comparison:
- South Korea: 1,220 robots per 10,000 workers
- Singapore: 818
- Germany: 449
- Japan: 446
- United States: 307
- China: lower density due to scale of manufacturing workforce, despite largest installed base
This high baseline underscores both the urgency and feasibility of Taiwan’s next-phase ambition: transitioning from supplier of key components — especially in semiconductors and electronics — to developer of integrated robotics systems and applications.
Practitioner Implications for Global Supply Chains
For supply chain professionals, Taiwan’s coordinated investment signals growing regional capacity in robotics-enabled logistics infrastructure — including warehouse automation, autonomous material handling, and smart factory integration. As robotics startups mature under this funding, expect accelerated deployment of localized solutions for labor-constrained environments, particularly in final-mile delivery support, cross-border e-commerce fulfillment, and high-precision manufacturing logistics. Given Taiwan’s entrenched role in global electronics and semiconductor supply chains, tighter coupling between AI robotics R&D and production-line automation could shorten time-to-deployment for intelligent, adaptive supply chain nodes — especially where human oversight remains critical but scarce. The focus on home care and high-risk industrial robotics also hints at dual-use potential for hazardous or remote logistics operations, such as port automation or cold-chain monitoring in aging infrastructure.
Source: Robotics & Automation News
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










