Robot maker has an eye on expansion

Kuka plans to produce and sell half of its robot products in China
Kuka AG, a German industrial robot manufacturer now owned by appliance maker Midea Group, aims to make China its fastest-growing market worldwide, with half of its robots produced and sold in the country by 2020.
Andy Wen, CEO of Kuka Robotics China, the local arm, says the projection is based on the fact that between 35 percent and 38 percent of Kuka's global robot sales revenue was generated in China in 2016, and the company's goal is to raise the figure to 50 to 55 percent by 2020.
"In the coming decade, we will see unprecedented opportunities in two industries in China, which are semiconductors and robotics," says Wen.
He also expects the Made in China 2025 strategy to accelerate the industrial upgrading process and help find solutions to concerns like the aging population and labor shortage, creating new growth possibilities for robot makers like Kuka.
"China is going through the process from 'made in China' to 'intelligent manufacturing in China', and will finally enter the phase of 'created in China'. During the process, Kuka needs more efforts to increase its localization ratio," says Wen, adding that these will focus on research and development, sales, after-sales service and apps.
In the second quarter of 2018, Kuka will launch a new factory in the Songjiang district of Shanghai. By then, its manufacturing capacity in China will be doubled to 20,000 units per year, according to Stefan Lampa, CEO of Kuka Roboter GmbH, the parent company.
"Kuka's China goal cannot be realized without support from Midea, including business expansion direction and production strategy tailored for the China market," says Wen.
Midea announced in December last year that it was taking over Kuka. It said the move would promote robot and automation technology in China and worldwide.
Last year, 88,992 industrial robots were sold in China, representing year-on-year growth of nearly 27 percent. Domestic suppliers installed 29,144 of them, up by almost 31 percent from 2015, according to the China Robot Industry Alliance.
China has announced plans to achieve an annual output of more than 100,000 industrial robots by 2020.
wang_ying@chinadaily.com.cn
Robots made by German manufacturer Kuka AG play percussion at an exhibition in Shanghai. Long Wei / For China Daily |
(China Daily Africa Weekly 10/06/2017 page26)
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