According to TechCrunch, Japan is leading the charge in the adoption of physical AI in the supply chain, driven by labor shortages and the need to maintain industrial standards and social services. The country aims to capture a 30% share of the global physical AI market by 2040, with Japanese manufacturers accounting for about 70% of the global market in industrial robotics as of 2022.
Key Drivers and Challenges
Several factors are driving the adoption of physical AI in Japan, including cultural acceptance of robotics, labor shortages due to demographic pressures, and the country’s deep industrial strength in mechatronics and hardware supply chains. Labor shortages are expected to shrink the working-age population by nearly 15 million over the next 20 years, accelerating the need for automation.
“Physical AI is being bought as a continuity tool: How do you keep factories, warehouses, infrastructure, and service operations running with fewer people?”
— Ro Gupta, Managing Director, Woven Capital
Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry is investing heavily in the development of physical AI, committing about $6.3 billion to strengthen core AI capabilities and support industrial deployment.
Japan’s Unique Approach
Japan’s approach to physical AI differs from the U.S. and China, which are moving more quickly to develop full-stack systems that integrate hardware, software, and data. Japan’s expertise in high-precision components and robotics control systems provides a significant competitive advantage in the global supply chain.
Case Studies
Mujin, a Japanese company, has developed software that allows industrial robots to handle picking and logistics tasks autonomously. WHILL, a Tokyo- and San Francisco-based startup, is leveraging Japan’s ‘monozukuri’ or craftsmanship heritage to develop an integrated platform for autonomous personal mobility vehicles.
From Pilots to Real-World Deployment
The shift from experimentation to real-world deployment is already underway, with industrial automation remaining the most advanced segment. Japan is installing tens of thousands of robots each year, particularly in the automotive sector.
Source: TechCrunch
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.









