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An Atlas robot on stage during a Hyundai and Boston Dynamics news conference before the the CES tech show in Las Vegas on Monday.Abbie Parr/The Associated Press

Hyundai Motor Group HYMTF plans to deploy humanoid robots ​at its U.S. manufacturing plant in ‍Georgia starting in 2028, marking a step toward automating higher-risk and repetitive manufacturing tasks, the South Korean company said.

Hyundai unveiled the production version of ‍the Atlas humanoid ​robot, developed by its unit Boston Dynamics, at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.

The company did not disclose the volume or cost of the robots, but said in a statement it aims to roll out ⁠adoption across all of its manufacturing sites as part of a push into “physical AI.”

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The robots will initially carry out parts sequencing tasks from 2028, with applications expanding gradually as safety and quality benefits are validated, it said.

By ‌2030, Hyundai said Atlas ‍robots were expected to move into component assembly with a ‍longer-term plan to take on tasks involving heavy ‌loads, repetitive motions and complex operations across production sites.

The ⁠robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by taking on higher-risk ​and repetitive tasks, laying the groundwork for broader commercial use in industrial settings, it said.

At Hyundai Motor’s affiliate Kia Corp. KIMTF, the labour union last year called to establish a body to address potential labour rights issues in preparation for ​the AI era, as workers raised concerns about expanding automation.

The company expects humanoid robots to become the largest segment of the physical artificial-intelligence market, which refers to AI systems embedded in hardware that collect real-world data and make autonomous decisions, spanning areas such as robotics, smart factories and ⁠autonomous driving.

Atlas features human-scale hands with tactile sensing and has the ⁠ability to lift up to 50 kilograms, according to Hyundai.

The robot can operate autonomously ‌and is designed to function in industrial environments ranging from minus 20 C to 40 C.

Hyundai said it is accelerating development in this area through partnerships with global AI leaders, including a collaboration with Nvidia NVDA-Q and Google GOOGL-Q, aimed at improving safety, ‌efficiency and real-world deployment.


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