Khaleej Times

The rise of the ‘cobots’

- Makiko Yamazaki Reuters

As workforces age in Japan and elsewhere, collaborat­ive robots — or ‘cobots’ — are seen as a key way to help keep all types of assembly lines moving without replacing humans.

tokyo — A two-armed robot in a Japanese factory carefully stacks rice balls in a box, which a worker carries off for shipment to convenienc­e stores. At another foodpackag­ing plant, a robot shakes pepper and powdered cheese over pasta that a person has just arranged in a container.

In a country known for bringing large-scale industrial robots to the factory floor, such relatively dainty machines have until recently been dismissed as niche and low-margin. But as workforces age in Japan and elsewhere, collaborat­ive robots — or “cobots” — are seen as a key way to help keep all types of assembly lines moving without replacing humans.

Japan’s Fanuc and Yaskawa Electric, two of the world’s largest robot manufactur­ers, didn’t see the shift coming. Now they are trying to catch up.

“We didn’t expect large manufactur­ers would want to use such robots, because those robots can lift only a light weight and have limited capabiliti­es,” said Kazuo Hariki, an executive director at Fanuc.

Although still a small portion of a $40 billion industrial robot market, the cobots segment is set to grow over the next decade to more than $10 billion, by some estimates — several dozen times its current size.

The concept of a robot co-worker is relatively new. Danish company Universal Robots, founded in 2005, introduced cobots for industrial applicatio­ns in late 2008, closely working with major German automakers such as Volkswagen.

At first, “a lot of people misunderst­ood what the cobot is,” said Universal Robots’ chief executive, Juergen von Hollen.

But the machines quickly became popular in Europe because of their safety, simplicity and ability to directly assist human workers, he said.

Supported by Berlin’s “Industrie 4.0” strategy to promote smart factories, the likes of Kuka and Robert Bosch followed Universal Robots into the market in the early 2010s.

Relatively inexpensiv­e and easy to operate, cobots are now used by companies of all sizes for smallbatch manufactur­ing and simple processes. In Japan, food maker Nippon Flour Mills uses a cobot made by Kawasaki Heavy Industries for seasoning packaged food sold at convenienc­e stores.

“Labour costs are rising, with more intense competitio­n to hire workers,” said Atsushi Honda, technology team manager at Nippon Flour’s plant engineerin­g group.

Automating some tasks with machines that didn’t need to be separated from human employees helped the company solve that labour issue, he said. Industry analysts say Japanese robot makers, in addition to underestim­ating the appeal of cobots, were held back in their home market by government safety regulation­s.

Heavy industrial robots had to be fenced off from human contact. Robots that worked in closer proximity to people were limited in how powerful they could be.

The restrictio­ns on cobots were relaxed in late 2013 to match internatio­nal standards. Japanese robotmaker­s remained cautious at first, but are now trying to dash into the market. —

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 ?? Reuters ?? Relatively inexpensiv­e and easy to operate, cobots are now used by companies of all sizes for smallbatch manufactur­ing and simple processes. —
Reuters Relatively inexpensiv­e and easy to operate, cobots are now used by companies of all sizes for smallbatch manufactur­ing and simple processes. —

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