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​KUKA unveils vision for Automation 2.0 as Physical AI reshapes global manufacturing​

KUKA Group is driving the transition to ‘Automation 2.0.’ At NVIDIA GTC, the company presents KUKA AMP and shows how Physical AI is expanding industrial automation.

31 Tháng Ba 2026


Augsburg, March 31, 2026 – An orange KUKA robot joined the stage at NVIDIA’s recent AI conference GTC, appearing alongside NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang, founder and head of the world’s most valuable publicly listed company. His keynote made one thing clear: industrial automation is entering a new phase. In manufacturing, AI systems will not only analyze and predict, but perceive, decide and act autonomously in the physical world.

Physical AI and advanced robotics are rapidly becoming key to modern manufacturing, supply chains, and industrial services as they boost productivity and competitiveness. This transformation is accelerated by breakthroughs in largescale AI models, simulation driven innovation, and powerful compute architectures spanning devices, edge systems, and datacenters.

KUKA Group, as a global automation company, is playing an important role in this shift. KUKA Group CEO Christoph Schell says: “Robots and automation systems are evolving from programmable machines to intelligent collaborators, capable of learning, adapting and operating safely alongside humans. With new open software platforms such as KUKA AMP bridging traditional deterministic automation, such as rule‑based, pre‑programmed systems, with intent-based automation, the pathway from concept to deployment is becoming faster, more accurate, more cost efficient and more autonomous”. KUKA unveiled its new automation management software platform (KUKA AMP) publicly for the first time at NVIDIA GTC.

From Automation 1.0 to Physical AI: KUKA Group builds on its strengths to drive global leadership and future growth

With this evolution in its technology stack the company known for its profound manufacturing expertise will be adding intent-based capabilities and physical AI across robotics, system integration, warehouse management, healthcare automation and simulation. Intent-based systems translate a user’s desired outcome into automated decisions and actions, allowing technology to figure out how to achieve a goal rather than requiring humans to specify every step. KUKA is repositioning itself to expand its global leadership role in the age of Physical AI, or what KUKA refers to as ‘Automation 2.0’.

In the here and now of traditional rule-based automation, the so-called ‘Automation 1.0’, markets are more competitive than ever: some long-standing automation customers in the automotive and other vertical industries are reducing investments significantly, and customer demand and manufacturing footprints are shifting internationally. “As we move toward Automation 2.0 and Physical AI, Automation 1.0 remains essential – for KUKA and for the entire industry. Proven, rule-based automation continues to deliver the stability and productivity our customers rely on, especially in high volume and safety critical environments. We’re not replacing it. We’re expanding it with intent-based and AI driven capabilities. Automation 1.0 remains as the backbone, while Automation 2.0 adds new flexibility. KUKA will continue to be a key player in both”, Christoph Schell says.

Robots are evolving from programmable machines into intelligent collaborators, capable of learning, adapting and operating safely alongside humans. © KUKA Group 

At the same time the technology disruption and potential for future growth is attracting investments from an increasing number of new and existing robotic and automation system suppliers. In this complex environment, the strategic repositioning is already reflected in the company’s performance. KUKA Group recorded profitable revenue growth of 4 percent in 2025 and increased order intake.

KUKA Group accelerates innovation with record R&D spend and a billion euro milestone in China

KUKA Group began laying the groundwork last year after the new CEO Christoph Schell took office. “We are consistently advancing our strategic direction. Our growth categories – intelligent automation, and software and AI defined infrastructure – are developing dynamically and form a capable foundation to enable long-term success. Our modular production platforms lead the way”, says Schell, and resumes: “Looking ahead, we expect a decade of profound technological transformation. Cost-out initiatives, Software and AI, as well as shifts in geographical importance are becoming decisive drivers of future success of the KUKA Group”, says the technology executive.

In 2025, KUKA Group invested a record €213 million in research and development. That is the highest amount in the company’s history. The company is more globally balanced than ever, with last year’s revenue evenly split, at around one third each, across EMEA (Europe, the Middle East and Africa), the Americas, and Asia-Pacific.

China remains the world’s largest robotics market, accounting for more than 50 percent of global demand. In this highly competitive environment, KUKA has further strengthened its market position and is now ranked among the top two players. For the first time in the company’s history, revenue from the China business exceeded the €1 billion threshold, underscoring the growing strategic importance of the region.

Christoph Schell, CEO KUKA Group

Automation 1.0 remains as the backbone, while Automation 2.0 adds new flexibility. KUKA will continue to be a key player in both.

Christoph Schell, CEO KUKA Group

Global expansion with innovation hubs and integrated automation solutions across Asia

In parallel, the company continues to expand its global footprint, most recently with one of many new training, research, and application centers in central Vietnam, developed in partnership with the University of Danang. In India, one of the fastest growing automation markets globally, KUKA Group continues to systematically expand its market presence to participate in the country’s strong medium to long-term industrial growth.

In the United States, KUKA has established a software and AI center of excellence in Silicon Valley. The team is headed by Marc Fleischmann and includes Melonee Wise, an award‑winning robotics pioneer, who is now working with the global automation group and presented KUKA AMP during NVIDIA GTC.

KUKA Group, known for its profound manufacturing expertise, is transforming from a machine manufacturer into a physical AI company. © KUKA Group 

For customers, this means a single automation solution partner capable of integrating hardware, software, and digital solutions – from industrial and mobile robotics to simulation, shuttles, cranes, warehouse systems, and healthcare automation – offering customers seamless, end-to-end automation that is easier to deploy, scale, and operate worldwide. The company also operates entire production plants and automated contract manufacturing facilities on behalf of customers, and, depending on the industry, offers Robots-as-a-Service models. CEO Schell commented: “We are among the very few global end-to-end industrial automation solution providers.”

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