HomeRoboticsU.S. automotive trade elevated robotic installations by 10% in 2024

U.S. automotive trade elevated robotic installations by 10% in 2024


U.S. automotive trade elevated robotic installations by 10% in 2024

A FANUC robotic working in automobile manufacturing. FANUC is a Japanese world chief in robotics and manufacturing facility automation. | Supply: FANUC America

The most recent numbers of the Worldwide Federation of Robotics (IFR’s) present automakers within the U.S. have been investing extra in automation. The IFR stated that complete installations of business robots within the automotive trade elevated by 10.7%, reaching 13,700 models in 2024. These are a part of the group’s preliminary 2024 outcomes.

In contrast, the Affiliation for Advancing Automation (A3) reported earlier this yr that U.S. automotive gross sales dropped 15% in 2024 in comparison with 2023. Alex Shikany, the chief vice chairman of A3, instructed The Robotic Report earlier this yr that he’s optimistic robotic orders will bounce again within the latter half of 2025.

Moreover, whereas the U.S. is putting in extra robots, it isn’t producing most of them. Nearly all of these robots come from abroad. Globally, 70% of installations are produced by 4 nations: Japan, China, Germany, and South Korea, the IFR stated.

Trying forward, it’s unclear how the present U.S. administration’s tariffs will have an effect on installations. Nearshoring might imply a rise in automation, nevertheless, the tariffs might additionally lead to costlier robots produced abroad. 

“The US has some of the automated automobile industries on the earth: The ratio of robots to manufacturing facility employees ranks fifth, tied with Japan and Germany and forward of China,” says Takayuki Ito, president of the Worldwide Federation of Robotics. “This can be a nice achievement of modernization. Nonetheless, in different key areas of producing automation, the US lags behind its opponents.”

A bar graph showing the IFR's latest installation numbers in various U.S. industries.

The automotive trade has, traditionally, been the most important purchaser of robots. | Supply: IFR

China additionally has sturdy automation within the automotive trade

Inside the 4 nations producing probably the most robots, the IFR stated Chinese language producers are probably the most dynamic. Already, these producers produce robots for an enormous home market that greater than tripled from 2019 to 2023. This places them in second place after Japan.

The IFR stated China’s success relies on its nationwide robotics technique. Its manufacturing trade put in a complete of about 280,000 models per yr between 2021 and 2023. That is in comparison with a complete of 34,300 installations in the USA in 2024.

Moreover, in China, robotics and automation are penetrating all ranges of manufacturing. For instance, China has a excessive robotic density of 470 robots per 10,000 workers in manufacturing, the third highest on the earth, surpassing Germany and Japan in 2023.

The US, then again, ranks solely tenth among the many world’s most automated manufacturing nations, with a robotic density of 295 robots per 10,000 workers. The nation’s automation is closely concentrated within the automobile sector: Round 40% of all new industrial robotic installations in 2024 are in automotive.

That is adopted by the metallic and equipment trade with 3,800 models representing a market share of 11%. Installations within the US electrical and electronics trade have a market share of 9%, with 2,900 models offered.

A3 recognized meals and client items, life sciences, prescribed drugs, and biomedical as among the fastest-growing industries within the U.S. for robotics. With meals and client items seeing a 65% development in orders in 2024, and life sciences, prescribed drugs, and biomedical rising by 46%.


SITE AD for the 2025 RoboBusiness call for presentations.
Now accepting session submissions!


RELATED ARTICLES

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisment -
Google search engine

Most Popular

Recent Comments