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How AI and robotics will manufacture our industrial future

How AI and robotics will manufacture our industrial future

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This blog follows on from our recent post on radical disruptions to hardware engineering

By Sam Smith-Eppsteiner and Thilo Braun

Manufacturing, a centuries-old industry historically slow to embrace change, is now being rapidly propelled into the 21st century. Supply chain disruptions and geopolitical tensions have exposed the vulnerabilities of outsourcing, while labor shortages across the US and Europe further strain an already pressured sector. Meanwhile, breakthroughs in AI and robotics signal an impending wave of automation. The industry is clearly on the cusp of a profound transformation—but what will manufacturing look like once the dust settles?

Note: manufacturing is a behemoth sector - ranging from chemicals and food to semiconductors and fighter jets. This post will focus on manufacturing discrete products and systems such as aircraft, robots, rockets, cars and their components.

Does manufacturing STILL matter?

The sector has long been a cornerstone of geopolitical strength. During the Gilded Age and throughout the world wars of the 20th century, industrial capacity was directly tied to national security. The ability to mass-produce tanks, planes, and weapons reshaped world maps and determined military dominance.

The US’s ability to repurpose large swathes of civilian manufacturing to produce military equipment, such as Ford and General Motors assembly lines producing fighter-planes and tanks, tipped the balance of power in World War II. Conversely, both Russia and Ukraine are heavily dependent on China’s production of components for drones to power their respective armies in the ongoing war in Ukraine.

Tanks move along an assembly line that produced cars and trucks before the war at Chrysler in Detroit during World War 2 (ca. 1941). (Image: Library of Congress, LC-USE6-D-001253.)

While manufacturing may not dominate today’s headlines, it remains central to geopolitical power. It underpins the development of critical technologies—from AI and advanced computing to energy infrastructure—that societies increasingly rely on.

However, the West, and in particular the US, have increasingly let manufacturing move to lower cost countries such as China. In 1980, the United States manufactured over 40 percent of global high-technology goods, compared to just 18 percent today (Atkinson). US manufacturing now makes up only 10% of GDP vs 20% in Germany and 26% in China (NIST, DESTATIS, China Briefing). 

Both sides of the aisle in the US agree that it's time to re-industrialize. The goal is not to restore low-skilled manufacturing lost to globalization in the late 20th century, but to lead in AI, robotics, and advanced production technologies—securing economic and strategic dominance in the 21st century.

Real Total Manufacturing Construction Spending (Source: US Treasury)

With the passing of the CHIPS Act and the Inflation Reduction Act, we’ve already seen a significant uptick in manufacturing investment in the US. However, we believe this is only the beginning, and new technologies are critical to support this manufacturing renaissance in the US.

Challenges of the Status Quo

Our conversations with manufacturing executives have surfaced several themes :

  1. Industrial Workforce: there is a large industrial workforce shortage across the US and Europe. Outsourcing removed the need to train new manufacturing operators and we are missing decades of learning by doing. Now, companies struggle to find both skilled and less skilled workers. Staff turnover of more than 40-50% is common. Increasing wages for competing jobs, such as warehouse workers and electricians, amplifies the challenges around recruiting and retention for manufacturing jobs.

    “The industrial workforce is the worst I’ve seen in my career” - CEO, Fortune 500 industrial conglomerate
  2. Rigid Automation: Robotics have come a long way, but remain largely constrained to high volume, low mix applications. While robot hardware is becoming increasingly commoditized, the cost, time, and skills required for programming them is often prohibitive. This is part of the reason why in the United States there are less than 300 robots per 10.000 manufacturing workers, significantly behind other countries such as South Korea (1,012 per 10.000), China (470 per 10.000) and Germany (429 per 10.000) (IFR).
  3. Supply Chain Resilience: Recent geopolitical events are driving re-shoring and friend-shoring of supply chains. It combines a need for reducing vulnerabilities to foreign sanctions (see graphite and rare earth minerals in battery supply chains) with national security concerns, both around foreign produced products (and possible backdoors - see Huawei and DJI) as well as securing military manufacturing capacity in case of war.
  4. Accelerating pace of innovation: Technology is moving increasingly quickly. AI is impacting development from material discovery to product design and simulation. Manufacturing and supply-chain operations need to deal with both increasingly dynamic demand, and accelerated product iteration cycles.
  5. Going Green: There’s mounting pressure, particularly in Europe, for manufacturers to reduce or eliminate emissions associated with their production. This includes both process emissions, largely stemming from generating industrial heat, as well as scope 3 emissions embedded in energy used in factories & transporting goods. While the new US administration has deprioritized this objective, we believe that there will be an enduring demand for energy-efficiency and sustainability in manufacturing across the globe.
Call for Innovation

The challenges outlined above create opportunities for new innovation. We see opportunities across new manufacturing technologies, supporting manufacturing operations, and even in building full-stack manufacturing capacity.

Labor

The US has significant manufacturing capacity that is largely underutilized for lack of labor. At the same time, companies are shifting manufacturing to other countries because they are failing to secure sufficient labor. To alleviate the industrial workforce challenge, new approaches are needed.

  • Developing new labor: More training of skilled labor is needed. While some opportunities lie outside of the remit of technology, technology can play a large enabling role. New technologies will create better trainings (e.g., Learn to Win) and reduce the training required for key processes (e.g., Rapta, Dirac) as well as supporting knowledge transfer (e.g., Aitomatic)
  • Increasing productivity: Existing labor can be freed up to focus on the highest value work. Automation in back-office processes, documentation, and quality control frees up labor to make more (e.g., CloudNC, GroundControl, Threaded Manufacturing)
  • Automation: Robotics can have a significant impact in resolving the labor shortage - more on this below.

We’re looking for founders with innovative approaches to help resolve the acute labor shortage we are facing today. This is the number one problem for many industrial leaders and the time is ripe for new technologies to be introduced. We see significant opportunities in leveraging AI for RAG / knowledge use cases as well as agentic workflows

Automation & Robotics

The convergence of AI and robotics is creating a new realm of opportunities. Programming robots has been a key constraint to deploying automation at scale. Automation has been most useful in low-mix, high volume opportunities.

Robotics serves high volume, low mix applications today. We anticipate increasing use in high volume, high mix applications before becoming omnipresent across all volumes and product mixes.

Artificial intelligence is enabling increasing flexibility in automation. This will initially translate to serving a higher mix at high volumes. Over time, we anticipate automation becoming omnipresent even in low volume applications.

Advanced AI models are enabling robots to handle variable tasks, adapt to changing production lines and products, and work safely alongside humans (e.g., Physical Intelligence, Covariant).

Applying this enables lower cost automation (e.g., RobCo, Launchpad) and new robotic form factors (e.g., Figure, 1X Technologies).

We’ve written extensively about our experiences with robotics (eg. Lessons learned the hard way: Robotics and The art of automation: original mistakes with robotics innovator Jorge Heraud) and this topic deserves a blog post of its own. We’ll keep it short here: we’re excited by a new generation of robotics emerging to power the future of manufacturing.

Manufacturing process

New technologies are enabling novel manufacturing processes. Additive manufacturing has become commonplace in some key applications including jet engine components, casting moulds, and spare parts manufacturing. In addition, we are seeing novel automation opportunities such as Machina Labs reinventing sheet metal manufacturing and enabling new product capabilities. Atomic Industries is leveraging AI to support tool and die design and manufacturing. Quantum Diamonds is creating new ways of sensing otherwise undetectable defects in manufacturing semiconductors.

We’re excited by ambitious founders utilizing recent technology advancements to create new ways of making things, often enabling product capabilities that would otherwise not be manufacturable.

AI x Manufacturing

Artificial intelligence has taken the world by storm with many potential applications in manufacturing. The Special Competitive Studies Project put together a great action plan for advanced manufacturing with a focus on AI. Labor, robotics, and novel processes described above rely on AI in many cases, and there are many more applications not captured here.

Generative AI is already used in back-office tasks such as managing supply chains and quoting, led by innovative companies like Toolpath, Didero, and Soff. Increasingly, we expect this to translate to the shop-floor, augmenting machine programming, troubleshooting, and error prevention.

The previous generation of machine learning for manufacturing has taught us that achieving adoption can be challenging and that pilot purgatory is real. Founders need deep empathy for the customer and initially tackling enabling/peripheral processes accelerates adoption. It’s easier to sell a brewery AI for predictive maintenance and troubleshooting than anything that might affect the taste of the beer.

Business Models

In addition to technological advances, we are looking at companies thinking creatively about business models. Deploying new manufacturing technologies in existing industrial supply chains can be challenging for various reasons including low risk tolerance, high sunk cost in equipment, constrained capital amongst component manufacturers, and the need for new engineering approaches to utilize novel manufacturing technologies.

In order to successfully deploy novel technologies or processes, vertical integration may be required. Companies such as Re:Build Manufacturing, Daedalus, and Hadrian are spearheading new manufacturing capacity build-out.

We are looking for companies with a strong customer understanding and commercial DNA.

Conclusion

Manufacturing in the West is experiencing a renaissance.  To be globally competitive, we need to manufacture faster, more flexibly, cheaper, and greener.  AI and robotics hold the key.

We’ve invested in leading companies innovating in manufacturing including Machina Labs, Form Labs, Fero Labs, and Citrine Informatics. We’re excited to talk to builders building for makers — we see a huge opportunity in enabling and accelerating the future of manufacturing.

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