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Japan bets on "open source" to revitalize its status as a major robotics power
The integration of dormant data and artificial intelligence (AI) in manufacturing sites is driving fierce competition in robot development. Taking the opportunity of SoftBank Group (SBG) acquiring Swiss industrial giant ABB’s robotics business, Yaskawa Electric and Fanuc have announced collaborations and initiatives to open control-related software. Japan, which has fallen behind China and the U.S. in the field of “physical AI” that enables machines to operate autonomously, is hoping to revive its status as a major robotics nation through these efforts.
“By integrating super AI (ASI), which surpasses human intelligence, with robotics technology, we aim to achieve a revolutionary evolution,” said Masayoshi Son, Chairman and President of SoftBank Group. In October 2025, SoftBank announced it would acquire ABB Robotics, a subsidiary of ABB, for $5.375 billion. This company ranks alongside Fanuc, Yaskawa Electric, and Germany’s KUKA (a subsidiary of China’s Midea Group) as one of the world’s top four industrial robot manufacturers.
“SoftBank Impact”
ABB has shipped over 500,000 units, including industrial robots, automated guided vehicles, and collaborative robots that assist human workers. SoftBank’s “cross-industry” acquisition has shocked the industry. The reason is that SoftBank hopes to stand out in the physical AI field by combining its own AI technology with robotics, breaking into the top four.
Click here to continue reading and visit the Nikkei Chinese website.
The Nikkei and the Financial Times merged in November 2015 to form a single media group. The alliance, formed by two newspapers founded in the 19th century in Japan and the UK, respectively, promotes collaboration across a wide range of fields under the banner of “high-quality, most powerful economic news.” As part of this, articles are exchanged between the Chinese websites of both newspapers.