Japan to Buy Nvidia Rubin Chips to Build Sovereign AI for Robots Japan plans to buy 27,500 Nvidia Rubin chips to build a sovereign AI model for robots, led by newly established Noetra Corp. with ¥387.3 billion in government funding. The initiative aims to reduce reliance on foreign technology and create a third option in AI, targeting over 30% of the global robotics market by 2040. Bloomberg -- Sign up for the Next Japan newsletter, for an inside view of the forces reshaping Japan, and what's next for its businesses, markets and consumers. Most Read from Bloomberg - Thailand Scraps Plan to End Visa-Free Entry for Indian Tourists https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-07-14/thailand-drops-plan-to-end-visa-free-entry-for-indians-after-hit-to-tourism?utm campaign=bn&utm medium=distro&utm source=yahooUS - OpenAI's First Device Will Be Movable, Screenless Speaker Built as AI Companion https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-07-14/openai-s-first-device-will-be-moveable-screenless-speaker-built-as-ai-companion?utm campaign=bn&utm medium=distro&utm source=yahooUS - CIA Says AI Drones Give Russian Troops Only 30 Minutes to Live https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-07-15/cia-says-ai-drones-give-russian-troops-only-30-minutes-to-live?utm campaign=bn&utm medium=distro&utm source=yahooUS - OnePlus, Once Popular with Tech Fans, to Pull Out of US and Europe https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-07-15/oneplus-once-popular-with-tech-fans-to-pull-out-of-us-and-europe?utm campaign=bn&utm medium=distro&utm source=yahooUS Japan is planning to buy 27,500 next-generation Rubin chips from Nvidia Corp. to build a homegrown foundational AI model for robots. Newly established Noetra Corp., which has been allocated ¥387.3 billion $2.4 billion from government coffers through March of next year, said it will oversee the endeavor and build a large-scale data center. Dozens of companies including SoftBank Corp., Toyota Motor Corp.-backed Preferred Networks Inc. and NEC Corp. are helping to set up and operate Noetra. Japan's order is sizable, but is small compared with plans by Microsoft Corp. to eventually build data centers scaling hundreds of thousands of Nvidia's Vera Rubin chips. The initiative is part of a series of efforts by the government to lower its reliance on foreign technology and bolster national security. Japan, which is home to some of the world's largest industrial robot makers, may be able to build an alternative to US and China AI systems, according to Noetra President Hironobu Tamba, who led the development of SoftBank's large language model. "Our goal is to create a genuine third option — one that Japan, and others, can choose," Tamba said in an interview. Noetra was created to bring the fragmented AI efforts of dozens of companies together, he said. The venture plans to release an AI model by March next year, followed by regular updates. The longer-term goal will be to release a model tailored for robotics applications within a few years, Tamba said. Noetra will draw on engineers from companies including SoftBank, Preferred Networks, NEC and Fujitsu Ltd., which have all developed their own AI models. SoftBank has the Sarashina LLM, Preferred Networks has PLaMo and NEC's flagship model is called cotomi. Developing a native physical AI model is central to Japan's broader ambition to create a leading AI and robotics hub. The government aims to capture more than 30% of the estimated ¥60 trillion global robotics market by 2040. The race to develop AI models capable of dictating sophisticated robotic movements has intensified globally. For Japan, however, the push is an imperative for a country with a declining population suffering from severe labor shortages.