China Has an Army
of Robots on Its Side in the Tariff War
Enormous investments
in factory equipment and artificial intelligence are giving China an edge in car
manufacturing and other industries.
·
China has more
factory robots for every 10,000 manufacturing workers than any other country except
South Korea or Singapore, according to the International Federation of Robotics.
·
China was striving
next to turn robotics into an entire new sector of business.
·
China’s
factories still employ legions of workers. Even with the automation, they are needed
to check quality and install some parts that require manual dexterity, like wiring
harnesses.
·
When Volkswagen
opened an electric car factory a year ago in Hefei, it had only one robot from Germany
and 1,074 robots made in Shanghai.
·
Beijing’s “Made
in China 2025” initiative, which began a decade ago, set out 10 industries in which
China sought to be globally competitive. Robotics was one of them.
[ABS News Service/24.04.2025]
China’s secret
weapon in the trade war is an army of factory robots, powered by artificial intelligence,
that have revolutionized manufacturing.
Factories are
being automated across China at a breakneck pace. With engineers and electricians
tending to fleets of robots, these operations are bringing down the cost of manufacturing
while improving quality.
As a result,
China’s factories will be able to keep the price of many of its exports lower, giving
it an advantage in fighting the trade war and President Trump’s high tariffs. China
is also facing new trade barriers by the European Union and developing countries
ranging from Brazil and India to Turkey and Thailand.
Factories are
now more automated in China than in the United States, Germany or Japan. China has
more factory robots for every 10,000 manufacturing workers than any other country
except South Korea or Singapore, according to the International Federation of Robotics.
China’s automation
drive has been guided by government directives and backed with huge investment.
And as robots replace workers, automation positions China to continue to dominate
mass production even as its labor force ages and becomes
less willing to take industrial jobs.
He Liang, founder
and chief executive of Yunmu Intelligent Manufacturing,
one of China’s top producers of humanoid robots, said China was striving next to
turn robotics into an entire new sector of business.
“The expectation
for humanoid robots is to create another electric car industry,” he said. “So from this perspective, it is a national strategy.”
Robots are replacing workers not just in car factories
but even in China’s many thousands of back-alley workshops.
Elon Li’s curbside workshop
in Guangzhou, the commercial hub of southeastern China,
has 11 workers who cut and weld metal to make inexpensive ovens and barbecue equipment.
He is now preparing to pay $40,000 to a Chinese company for a robotic arm with a
camera. The device uses artificial intelligence to observe how a worker welds the
sides of an oven, and then duplicates the action with minimal human intervention.
Only four years ago, the same system was available only
from foreign robot companies and cost nearly $140,000. “Before, I never would have
imagined investing in automation,” Mr. Li said, adding that a human employee “can
only work for eight hours a day, but a machine can work 24 hours.”
Bigger companies
bet far more on automation.
In Ningbo,
a huge factory for Zeekr, a Chinese electric carmaker,
had 500 robots when it opened four years ago. Now there are 820, and many more are
planned.
Cheerfully
trilling Kenny G tunes to warn any people of their approach, robot carts haul aluminum ingots to an automated elevator, which lifts the blocks
of metal to a furnace at the top of a 40-foot-tall Chinese-made machine. Once molten, the aluminum is cast into the shapes of various car body panels
and other components. More robot carts, and the occasional human driving a forklift,
take the components to a warehouse.
Yet more robots
take the panels to the assembly line, where hundreds of robotic arms, working in
teams of up to 16, do a complex dance to weld them together into car bodies. The
welding area is a so-called dark factory, meaning that the robots can operate without
workers and with the lights off.
China’s factories
still employ legions of workers. Even with the automation, they are needed to check
quality and install some parts that require manual dexterity, like wiring harnesses.
There are things cameras and computers cannot do on their own. Before cars are painted,
workers still run gloved hands over them and sand smooth any tiny imperfections.
Yet some of
the later steps of quality control are also being automated with the help of artificial
intelligence.
Near the end
of Zeekr’s assembly line, a dozen high-resolution cameras
take photos of each car. Computers compare the images to an extensive database of
correctly assembled cars and alert factory staff if a discrepancy is found. The
task takes seconds to complete.
“Most of our
colleagues’ jobs involve sitting in front of a computer monitor,” said Pinky Wu, a Zeekr worker.
Zeekr and other Chinese automakers are also using
artificial intelligence to design cars and their features more efficiently.
Carrie Li,
a designer who works at Zeekr’s new office building in
Shanghai, uses A.I. to analyze how different interior
surfaces will intersect in a car.
“I have
more spare time to open my mind and explore for myself which kinds of fashion trends
to include in the cars’ interior,” Ms. Li said.
Car factories
in the United States also use automation, but much of the equipment comes from China.
Most of the world’s car assembly plants built in the past 20 years were in China,
and an automation industry grew up around them.
Chinese companies
also bought overseas suppliers of advanced robotics, like Kuka of Germany, and moved
much of their operations to China. When Volkswagen opened an electric car factory
a year ago in Hefei, it had only one robot from Germany and 1,074 robots made in
Shanghai.
China’s rapid
advance in factory robotics has been propelled from the top down. Beijing’s “Made
in China 2025” initiative, which began a decade ago, set out 10 industries in which
China sought to be globally competitive. Robotics was one of them.
To force the
car industry to think about how to use humanoid robots with two arms and two legs,
for example, government officials in Beijing told major automakers last year to
rent robots and submit videos of them performing tasks in their assembly plants.
The videos
required many takes to get them right. The robots did only basic tasks, like sorting
auto parts in a warehouse. But the initiative has helped push the carmakers along.
In a show of
the automation push, the Beijing municipal government held a half-marathon on Saturday
for 12,000 runners and 20 humanoid robots. Only six robots finished the race, and
the fastest of them took nearly three times as long as the fastest runners. But
the event helped draw attention to robots.
Last month,
Premier Li Qiang, China’s second-highest official, said
in his annual report to the legislature that the country’s plans this year would
include an effort to “vigorously develop” intelligent robots. The country’s top
economic planning agency announced a $137 billion national venture capital fund
for robotics, artificial intelligence and other advanced technologies.
China’s government-controlled
banks have increased lending to industrial borrowers over the past four years by
a staggering $1.9 trillion. That has paid for the construction of factories as well
as the replacement of equipment at existing ones.
China’s universities
produce about 350,000 mechanical engineering graduates per year, as well as electricians,
welders and other trained technicians.
By comparison,
American universities graduate about 45,000 mechanical engineers each year.
Jonathan Hurst,
the chief robot officer and a co-founder of Agility Robotics, a leading American
robot manufacturer, said finding skilled employees had been one of his biggest challenges.
As a graduate student in the Robotics Institute at Carnegie Mellon University in
Pittsburgh, Mr. Hurst said, he was one of two mechanical engineers.
China’s rapid
embrace of automation worries some Chinese workers.
Geng Yuanjie, 27, drives
a forklift at the Zeekr factory, where he has worked for
the past two years. He said there were considerably fewer robots at the Volkswagen
factory where he previously worked. Surrounded now by robots, he has few co-workers
to talk to during his 12-hour shifts.
“I can feel
the trend towards automation,” Mr. Geng said as he watched
a robot cart pull a rack of car parts past his forklift. He said that his high school
education might not be enough for him to qualify for classes in programming robots,
and that he worried he might lose his job someday to a robot.
“It is not
just my concern — everyone worries about it,” Mr. Geng
said.
Automation
has threatened and even eliminated jobs around the world for more than a century,
often slowing automation’s growth. In China, there are fewer obstacles than practically
anywhere else. China has no independent labor unions,
and Communist Party control leaves almost no room for dissent.
Another factor
behind China’s automation drive is the country’s demographic crisis.
The number
of babies born each year has dropped by almost two-thirds since 1987. At the same
time, two-thirds of people turning 18 now enroll at a
university or college, an educational trajectory that has allowed a new generation
to aspire to careers outside factory labor.
“China’s demographic
dividend is over,” said Stephen Dyer, head of the Asia industrial practice at AlixPartners,
a consulting firm. “They’re now in a demographic deficit, and the only way out of
that is productivity.”