Humanoid robots to build cars for major manufacturer Hyundai from 2028


Vehicle maker Hyundai says it plans to use humanoid robots to build cars from 2028.

The South Korean-based firm will join the likes of Tesla and BYD in using human-like robot forms to help production. The firm displayed a model named Atlas at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas and said it now plans to integrate the model across its global network.

Robotics manufacturing company Boston Dynamics built Atlas, while Hyundai own a majority stake in Boston Dynamics.

That firm has become renowned for another product named Spot, robot dog, which has a wide range of uses including operating in environments unsafe for humans, close up inspection and data capture.

Atlas, on the other hand, walks upright on two legs rather than four and is described as โ€œthe world’s most dynamic humanoid robotโ€.

Among the features listed by Boston Dynamics are a four-hour battery which Atlas can replace itself before it runs out, the ability to learn new tasks and is โ€œmade to operate at the same workstations using the same equipment your staff doesโ€.

Boston Dynamicsโ€™ Spot robot

Boston Dynamicsโ€™ Spot robot (POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

The company also say that Atlas already took its โ€œfirst steps into a customer facility with Hyundai for field testing on real-world sequencing tasksโ€ to evaluate how useful it would be in a full production role.

Hyundai have said the robots will help to ease physical loads on human staff and take on any potentially dangerous tasks to improve safety.

The announcement comes after Hyundai announced more than $20bn (ยฃ15.5bn) would be invested in the US over the coming years, as they look to expand car production in the country and provide further investment in both AI and autonomous driving technology.

In the US, the likes of Googleโ€™s parent company Alphabet, with its Waymo division, and EV-maker Tesla have both invested heavily in autonomous driving operations. Tesla has also created its own humanoid robot, named Optimus, though it continues to face challenges in building and operating it to the required level. Selling one million robots is part of Elon Muskโ€™s new salary scheme which could net him up to $1tn across the decade.

For Hyundai, while vice chair Jaehoon Chang acknowledged that concerns remain over people losing jobs to robots, the age of integration in the workforce will begin around two years from now.

No details over how many robots will initially be deployed were given.

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