‘Japan’s excellence is a philosophy, a way of life’: Jensen Huang wants robots to take care of an aging society with a labor shortage Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and Fujitsu CEO Takahito Tokita, alongside leaders from Fanuc, Yaskawa Electric, and Kawasaki Heavy Industries, announced a major push into physical AI robotics in Tokyo on Thursday. The initiative aims to address Japan's acute labor shortage and care for its rapidly aging society by developing autonomous robots for factories, homes, and hospitals. Huang emphasized Japan's manufacturing excellence as a key enabler for safe and precise physical AI systems. Japanese communications company Fujitsu https://fortune.com/company/fujitsu/ is leading a major push in artificial intelligence using Nvidia’s technology, bringing together what it said was the best in Japan’s manufacturing prowess in robotics with AI https://apnews.com/hub/artificial-intelligence . The technology area known as “physical AI” refers to smart, futuristic robots that can think on their own, not just follow programmed directions, to work safely alongside people in factories, homes and hospitals. The initiative was announced in Tokyo on Thursday by Nvidia Corp. https://apnews.com/hub/nvidia-corp Chief Executive Jensen Huang and Fujitsu Chief Executive Takahito Tokita, along with the CEOs of Japan’s top makers of industrial robots, Fanuc Corp., Yaskawa Electric Corp. and Kawasaki Heavy Industries. The latest announcement comes on top of a deal announced by Nvidia and Fujitsu https://apnews.com/article/nvidia-fujitsu-ai-japan-technology-3e800f495124c9f66fa654deaec41e52?utm source=copy&utm medium=share last year. The executives expressed hopes that the robots can address the nation’s acute labor shortage https://apnews.com/article/technology-japan-tokyo-376b88f6503461497d94df46cc9c5d8c . Japan is among the most rapidly aging societies in the developed world and the smart robots could help take care of the elderly living alone, they said. Huang said physical AI was a good fit for Japan because of the country’s reputation for manufacturing quality because robots that move independently could potentially be dangerous. “Japan’s excellence is a philosophy, a way of life. ‘Made in Japan’ means the highest quality, the highest precision. Japan sets the standard for the state-of-the-art in modern manufacturing,” he said. Huang listed Japan’s prized concepts in fine manufacturing such as “kaizen,” which means “continuous improvement.” The companies did not give a specific time frame for the arrival of such robots in daily life. They stressed efforts were underway with what they called the first phase of the collaboration coming later this year. There has been no decision on setting up a joint venture, although that could come later, they said. Japan has acknowledged it has fallen behind some nations, including China and the U.S., in AI, and has been eager to play catch-up. The government of Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi https://apnews.com/article/japan-takaichi-security-economy-immigration-0d87101569c8ae10bca5435a731ae3bf recently announced a plan to drum up more than 370 trillion yen $2.3 trillion in public and private investment in various technology fields by 2040, including physical AI, semiconductors and data centers. Silicon Valley-based Nvidia, which offers an open-source technology, has been aggressive in forging various ties in Japan, including with leading banks, automaker Toyota https://fortune.com/company/toyota-motor/ Motor Corp., video game maker Sega and national research institute Riken. Subscribe to Fortune Gulf Brief . Every Tuesday, this new newsletter delivers clear-eyed, authoritative intelligence on the deals, decisions, policies, and power shifts shaping one of the world’s most consequential regions, written for the people who need to act on it.