Advertisement

China wants humanoid robots to automate aged care, handle grunt work as demographics shift

  • Anthropomorphic robots are being built for roles where manpower is in short supply as China’s population rapidly ages and shrinks

Reading Time:5 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
7
Illustration: Henry Wong
Mandy Zuoin Shanghai

Wandering around an exhibition hall at a tech fair in Shanghai, a humanoid robot took small steps for robotkind. And while still unable to leap itself, its presence nonetheless illustrated strides in China’s robotics industry.

Advertisement

It appears a little clumsy at first glance – unlike the anthropomorphically perfected androids seen in sci-fi – but the 25kg (55-pound) device features full-body controls and 30 degrees of movement freedom. It can also grasp objects and is capable of conversing in sign language.

Zhang Yongwen, CEO of the robot’s nascent manufacturer, Fairyon Humanoid Tech, sees the company’s future mainly in the homes of elderly people – offering them much-needed assistance and companionship.

“We’re also developing a new type that can make facial expressions that closely resemble humans, such as smiling and blinking,” he said, speaking at last month’s China (Shanghai) International Technology Fair, where his robot turned heads while roaming the floor.

Established early this year in Shanghai, Zhang’s company is among the humanoid robot developers that have multiplied in China in recent years as the country has set its sights on technological innovations and high-end manufacturing amid an intensifying trade and tech rivalry with the United States.

Advertisement