North American Robotics Continues to Boom

Dec. 5, 2012
RIA Reports 20% Increase in 2012

Robotics companies based in North America are enjoying another strong year, with new orders up 20%, according to the Robotic Industries Assn. (RIA). An estimated 225,000 robots are used in factories here; the U.S. is second only to Japan in robot use. It’s still only the tip of the iceberg in market potential, however.

North American companies ordered 16,363 robots valued at more than $1 billion in the first nine months, a unit increase of 20% and value increase of 29% compared with the same period in 2011. Including numbers from outside North America, the totals are 18,844 robots valued at $1.25 billion.

The automotive OEM and component suppliers remain the robotics industry's biggest customers, accounting for 64% of the new orders through the third quarter. Sales to these two segments rose 45% through September. That's particularly impressive given that 2011 growth was also strong — 77% growth for automotive component suppliers and 59% for automotive OEMs, noted Jeff Burnstein, RIA’s president.

The robotics market shows significant room for growth, Burnstein indicated. "Many observers believe that only about 10% of the U.S. companies that could benefit from robots have installed any so far," he said. "Among those that have the most to gain from robots are small and medium-sized companies."

Sponsored Recommendations

Keep your production line moving. Learn how ingress protection extends motor life, cuts failures, and improves uptime in harsh food processing conditions.
Learn how to evolve your machine design and engineering capabilities with real-world, practical use cases of ML and GenAI.
Discover how IO-Link-enabled piezoelectric vibration sensors are transforming machine health monitoring offering deeper insights, fewer installation hurdles, and smarter maintenance...
Get some peace of mind and a higher level of protection into your machine designs with a comprehensive guide to machine safety. From the evolution of integrated safety logic to...