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Japan wants 10 million more robots by 2040, some providing medical care

Japan wants 10 million more robots by 2040, some providing medical care

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Techpivo News
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AI and ML Japan wants 10 million more robots by 2040, some providing medical care We’ve learned so much cleaning up after Fukushima, let’s level that up with added AI, says minister Simon Sharwood Simon Sharwood APAC Editor Published wed 1 Jul 2026 // 07:08 UTC Japan has updated its national robotics strategy with a goal to adopt 10 million robots by the year 2040, with some intended to provide medical care. Minister for the Economy, Trade and Industry Ryosei Akazawa yesterday announced the amended strategy, which envisions more robots working to provide medical care, or taking on roles in the food and beverage manufacturing sectors. To make it happen, Akazawa announced investments in models for AI-powered robots and other forms of physical AI. As is often the case in Japan, this effort will bring together a handful of industrial giants to share their expertise. That collaboration will take place within a new organization called “Noetra” that will be majority-owned by SoftBank, NEC, Sony Group, and Honda. Fujitsu and Rakuten are apparently pondering participation. REG AD The minister said Japan already has a lot of robotics expertise gained from using machines in healthcare for the elderly, disaster response, manufacturing, and even decommissioning the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant. He hopes to use that experience to turn Japan into a robotics powerhouse that serves domestic needs and creates world-leading products. REG AD MORE CONTEXT You have got to be KDDI-ng – Japanese telco exposes 14.2 million managed email credentials Japan’s PM orders cybersecurity review to stop Mythos going full CyberZilla Future holiday horror: ‘A robot lost my luggage in Tokyo’ Bullet train upgrade brings 5G windows and noise-cancelling cabins to Japan One reason Japan is keen on robots is the combination of its ageing population and restrictive migration policies means it is hard to find workers. Robots therefore supplant humans in some roles – and often do so without much compl

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