logo
WAIC 2025: Shanghai Electric Debuts First Industrial Humanoid Robot "SUYUAN," Advancing Next-Gen Intelligent Manufacturing through Holistic Value Chain Layout

WAIC 2025: Shanghai Electric Debuts First Industrial Humanoid Robot "SUYUAN," Advancing Next-Gen Intelligent Manufacturing through Holistic Value Chain Layout

Yahoo6 days ago
Boasting full-spectrum industrial capabilities from core technology development to integrated solutions, China's leading innovator drives the next-generation industrial revolution through a comprehensive industry chain strategy
SHANGHAI, July 29, 2025 /CNW/ -- Shanghai Electric (SEHK: 2727, SSE: 601727) proudly unveiled its first self-developed industrial humanoid robot, "SUYUAN," during its global debut at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference on July 26 in Shanghai.
With 38 degrees of freedom (DoF) and 275 TOPS of on-device computation power, SUYUAN delivers precise operations and dynamic movements, making it adaptable to a wide range of industrial application scenarios. This launch represents a significant milestone in Shanghai Electric's humanoid robotics journey, further strengthening its comprehensive value chain for industrial humanoid solutions.
Designed with human-like proportions—standing 167 cm tall and weighing 50 kg—SUYUAN is engineered to navigate complex industrial environments with ease. Its 38-DoF articulation provides exceptional dexterity, enabling both delicate manipulations and expansive motions. Capable of handling up to 10 kg of total cargo and lifting 2 kg objects with a single arm, SUYUAN is perfectly suited for logistics and assembly line tasks, operating efficiently at a movement speed of 5 km/h.
SUYUAN leverages a fusion of LiDAR and binocular vision technologies to achieve self-guided mobility. Its 275-TOPS on-device AI processor powers instant data analysis and LLM integration, allowing natural task interpretation and adaptive object handling.
In pilot tests, SUYUAN autonomously identified, positioned, picked, and relocated mixed-size crates, using advanced computer vision and synchronized joint control, significantly boosting warehouse productivity.
Supercharging the Industrial Revolution: Intelligent Manufacturing Powered by Humanoid Precision
The high-end equipment manufacturing advancements driven by innovation hinge on real-world applications. At WAIC 2025, Shanghai Electric's "LINGKE" dual-arm robot also wowed the audiences at a skills showcase, tackling complex manufacturing challenges with its high-precision operation, adaptive collaboration, and closed-loop data capabilities.
LINGKE is more than a human labor replacement. It uses bimanual coordination and compliant force control to free workers from repetitive, high-intensity tasks, improving efficiency fivefold. The core competency lies in its Data-Model-Deployment closed-loop technology. With operational data as the starting point, LINGKE creates self-optimizing workflow through data cleansing and annotation, model training, live deployment, and feedback-based optimization, achieving the transition from "passive executors" to "active learners."
Pioneering Smarter Automation
At WAIC 2025, a joint venture between Shanghai Electric and Johnson Electric debuted with a showcase of revolutionary humanoid robots, key hardware modules, and system integration solutions. The venture introduced rotary joints, linear joints, and dexterous finger joints for next-gen robots, delivering precise, smooth, quiet, and intelligent motion performance.
The joint venture further strengthened its efforts to expand product applications by securing two major partnerships: a first-unit supply agreement with the National and Local Co-Built Humanoid Robotics Innovation Center (Qinglong Project) and a product cooperation memorandum with Fourier Robotics.
With 189 patent applications (including 120 granted) in humanoid robotics, Shanghai Electric is making significant strides in AI-driven industrial innovation. Going forward, Shanghai Electric will expand smart "human-machine" and "inter-machine" collaborative solutions across multifunctional industrial environments. Its comprehensive R&D capabilities—spanning critical components to fully functional robots—are accelerating the development of a world-class AI ecosystem.
For more information, please visit https://www.shanghai-electric.com/group_en/.
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/waic-2025-shanghai-electric-debuts-first-industrial-humanoid-robot-suyuan-advancing-next-gen-intelligent-manufacturing-through-holistic-value-chain-layout-302515631.html
SOURCE Shanghai Electric
View original content to download multimedia: http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/July2025/29/c3849.html
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Motive's $150M War Chest Signals All-Out Assault on Fleet Tech Dominance
Motive's $150M War Chest Signals All-Out Assault on Fleet Tech Dominance

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Motive's $150M War Chest Signals All-Out Assault on Fleet Tech Dominance

Motive Technologies is declaring war on fragmented fleet technology. The San Francisco-based company closed a $150 million funding round this week led by Kleiner Perkins, positioning the AI-powered platform for an aggressive expansion that could reshape how fleets manage everything from driver safety to fuel cards. The latest round, which includes participation from new investor AllianceBernstein alongside existing backers, comes just months after Motive secured $30 million earlier this year. Combined, the $150 million in fresh capital gives the company significant firepower to accelerate the future of physical operations. According to the company's announcement, the funding will enable Motive to accelerate growth by further expanding AI capabilities, scaling internationally, and sustaining momentum with enterprise customers. What started as a fleet management company a few short years ago has evolved into something approaching the 'everything app' for commercial fleets. Motive now operates across five core verticals: fleet management, driver safety, equipment monitoring, spend management, and workforce management, all unified under what the company calls its AI-powered Operations Platform. Fleets can manage AI-powered dashcams that detect everything from fatigue and distraction to smoking in cab, fuel cards with fraud protection guarantees up to $250,000, workforce management tools that track driver qualifications and training, and preventive maintenance systems, all feeding into a single analytics dashboard that promises natural language queries by year-end. Motive's competitive moat lies in its AI capabilities, built on data from nearly 100,000 customers and 1.3 million drivers across industries from transportation to construction. The platform captures billions of miles of driving data monthly, feeding machine learning models that the company says achieve accurate detection rates for high-severity behaviors. Recent AI innovations include Motive AI Coach, the industry's first AI avatar delivering personalized driver coaching at scale. The system analyzes weekly driver performance across safety, fuel efficiency, and compliance metrics, then generates customized feedback through virtual coaching sessions. The platform's latest AI features detect driver fatigue through multiple indicators, including yawning, eye rubbing, and abnormal speed changes. Lane swerving detection and unsafe parking alerts add additional layers of safety monitoring, while fraud detection combines vehicle telematics with payment data to automatically decline suspicious fuel card transactions. The funding comes as fleet technology markets consolidate around comprehensive platforms rather than point solutions. The competitive dynamics extend beyond traditional telematics providers. Microsoft, Google, and Amazon are all investing heavily in commercial vehicle AI, while startups like Samsara have raised billions for competing platforms. Motive's response appears focused on depth over breadth, building superior AI models through data advantages rather than racing to new market segments. The new capital will fund aggressive international expansion, with Motive officially launching in the UK this August. The company has already gained recognition in the region, being named one of Built In's '7 Hardware Companies in the UK to Know' ahead of its formal market entry. The UK expansion represents Motive's first major European market entry and reflects growing international demand for AI-powered fleet management solutions. The company is already seeing rapid growth in Mexico, driven by rising demand for fleet safety and sustainability solutions across North America. Enterprise customers represent Motive's fastest-growing segment, with the platform now serving global leaders. Industry analysts note that companies are finally ready to move beyond patchwork solutions to unified platforms, with Motive's comprehensive approach well-positioned to capitalize on this trend. Motive's platform strategy generates multiple revenue streams from single customer relationships. A fleet might start with dashcams for safety compliance, add fuel cards for spend management, then integrate workforce management and equipment monitoring. Each additional module increases customer lifetime value while creating switching costs that protect market share. The funding will accelerate development of what Motive calls its AI-first architecture. Unlike competitors retrofitting AI onto existing platforms, Motive has rebuilt core systems around machine learning models that improve continuously through real-world data collection. The platform's analytics capabilities represent the next frontier. Motive Analytics promises to unify insights from safety, maintenance, and spend management into natural language interfaces that let fleet managers ask complex questions and receive instant answers. Company executives emphasize that the focus extends beyond data collection to actionable automation that makes fleets safer and more profitable without requiring additional human oversight. Bloomberg reported last year that the company could go public by the end of 2025. The latest funding round maintains Motive's position as one of the most valuable private companies in fleet technology, with earlier rounds valuing the business at $2.85 billion. The path to public markets appears increasingly clear. Motive serves nearly 100,000 customers across multiple industries, demonstrating the scale and diversification that public investors demand. The platform's recurring revenue model, combined with expanding customer lifetime values, provides the predictable growth metrics that support premium valuations. Motive's funding success is a broader trend that's reshaping commercial transportation. Fleets are moving beyond compliance-focused technology toward platforms that optimize operational efficiency, driver retention, and financial performance. The integration of AI, telematics, and financial services represents a fundamental shift in how transportation companies view technology investment. The implications extend beyond trucking. Construction, oil and gas, utilities, and other physical economy sectors face similar challenges around workforce management, equipment monitoring, and operational efficiency. Motive's platform approach could provide a template for technology adoption across industries where physical assets and mobile workforces dominate, with the UK expansion serving as a test case for broader European market penetration. For competitors, the funding round intensifies competition in markets that many considered mature. Traditional telematics providers, focused on location tracking, now face platforms that promise comprehensive operational transformation. The question becomes whether established players can match Motive's AI capabilities or risk losing customers to more sophisticated alternatives. What seems inevitable is that Motive's comprehensive platform approach, combining safety, operations, and financial management in a single AI-powered system, represents the future of fleet technology. The funding provides resources to execute that vision at a global scale, potentially reshaping how millions of commercial vehicles operate across the physical economy. For an industry long defined by fragmented technology solutions, Motive's integration strategy could prove as transformative as the AI capabilities that power it. The $150 million funding round ensures the company has the resources to execute its vision of comprehensive fleet technology platforms at a global scale. The post Motive's $150M War Chest Signals All-Out Assault on Fleet Tech Dominance appeared first on FreightWaves. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

PPG, Asian Paints renew India joint venture in 15-year agreement
PPG, Asian Paints renew India joint venture in 15-year agreement

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

PPG, Asian Paints renew India joint venture in 15-year agreement

Agreement builds on successful partnership in one of world's fastest growing economies PITTSBURGH, August 04, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--PPG (NYSE:PPG) today announced the extension of its joint venture agreement in India with Asian Paints Ltd. The 15-year renewal will allow the companies to continue serving the country's industrial, protective, marine, packaging, automotive and powder coatings customers with industry-leading solutions that solve customers' biggest challenges. The extension will take effect in 2026 and run through 2041. "We are pleased to announce the renewal of our joint venture with Asian Paints, which is a testament to the past success and strong growth potential in this key market," said Tim Knavish, PPG chairman and CEO. "This decades-long relationship is a key success factor for our business in India, and we look forward to serving customers in this rapidly growing region." The partnership was established in 1997 with the formation of a 50-50 joint venture, PPG Asian Paints Private Ltd., to service the automotive, refinish, marine and consumer packaging markets. It was expanded in 2012 with the formation of a separate 50-50 joint venture, Asian Paints PPG Private Ltd., to service the protective and powder coatings market. Both joint ventures will continue to leverage PPG's technical expertise and global footprint. PPG will continue to have management control of PPG Asian Paints Private Ltd., and Asian Paints Ltd will have effective management control of Asian Paints PPG Private Ltd. to best utilize the companies' respective strengths. To learn more about Asian Paints Ltd., visit To learn more about Asian Paints PPG Ltd., visit About Asian Paints Limited Asian Paints is India's leading paint and decor company and ranked among the top eight coatings companies in the world with a consolidated turnover of ₹ 33,797 crores (₹ 338 billion) with a market capital of approx. ₹ 2,276 billion. Asian Paints, along with its subsidiaries, have operations in 14 countries across the world with 26 paint manufacturing facilities, servicing consumers in over 60 countries through Asian Paints, Apco Coatings, Asian Paints Berger, Asian Paints Causeway, SCIB Paints, Taubmans and Kadisco Asian Paints. Asian Paints also offers a wide range of Home Décor products and is the leading player in the Integrated Décor space in India. To learn more, visit PPG: WE PROTECT AND BEAUTIFY THE WORLD® At PPG (NYSE:PPG), we work every day to develop and deliver the paints, coatings and specialty materials that our customers have trusted for more than 140 years. Through dedication and creativity, we solve our customers' biggest challenges, collaborating closely to find the right path forward. With headquarters in Pittsburgh, we operate and innovate in more than 70 countries and reported net sales of $15.8 billion in 2024. We serve customers in construction, consumer products, industrial and transportation markets and aftermarkets. To learn more, visit The PPG Logo and We protect and beautify the world are registered trademarks of PPG Industries Ohio, Inc. CATEGORY Corporate View source version on Contacts Media Contacts:Greta Edgar BorzaPPG Corporate Communications+1 724 316 7552edgar@ Parag RaneAsian Paints Ltd.+91 Error while retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data

China And The EU Move Forward On Green Energy Without The U.S.
China And The EU Move Forward On Green Energy Without The U.S.

Forbes

time8 minutes ago

  • Forbes

China And The EU Move Forward On Green Energy Without The U.S.

Sino-European cooperation in the energy sector isn't just important for renewables, but a sign of wider geopolitical shifts. getty At the end of July, a highly anticipated summit between China and the European Union took place in Beijing. Chinese President Xi Jinping, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, and European Council President Antonio Costa tackled an array of issues in a tense summit. The results of the summit were largely disappointing. For Beijing, its great hope of finding an alternative set of developed economies to act as new markets and bypass U.S. tariffs while splitting the Western alliance, remained out of reach due to China's refusal to stop supporting Russia. Brussels was similarly unwilling to accommodate China on critical minerals initiatives and trade imbalance remediation. The summit was largely inconclusive. Amidst this strategic stalemate, there was one area of notable cooperation: green energy. The two sides issued a joint statement agreeing to accelerate the development and deployment of green energy technologies and reaffirmed their support for the Paris Climate Agreement, which the Trump administration has withdrawn from. For both Brussels and Beijing, the cooperation represents a shared opportunity to make an imprint on the international system while the current U.S. policies abdicate its global responsibilities, critics say. Europe gains leverage over the U.S. by signaling it has strategic autonomy and maintains a source of cheap imports vital for Europe's state-directed green energy transition. China maintains a lifeline to many advanced economies and export markets for its affordable, mass-produced green tech, such as solar panels and electric vehicles. While both sides do make gains, and this by no means represents Brussels capitulating to Beijing, China has clearly gotten the better deal. Through this deal and others like it, as the U.S. lurches towards 'climate isolationism,' distrustful of prevailing science, China is poised to increase its influence in key areas, including green energy, through its multilateral economic and renewable energy engagement. China: a Renewables Superpower? China is a self proclaimed renewables superpower and the global leader in renewable energy production, accounting for 40% of the world's renewable energy capacity and investing $818 billion in green energy in 2024. Between January and May of 2025, China installed enough wind and solar power to generate as much electricity as Indonesia or Turkey. In only the first few months of 2025, China has produced as much solar capacity as in all of 2020, demonstrating the speed of Beijing's green energy development. Its record-breaking solar and wind installations are only the tip of the iceberg. China is particularly committed to nuclear energy. Beijing has set out to become the largest nuclear energy-producing country by 2030, a goal it is on track to meet. Currently, it has 58 operable nuclear reactors, fewer than the U.S.'s 94 reactors. However, it took the U.S. forty years to create that nuclear capacity, which China has added in only 10 years. In the last 30 years, the U.S. has successfully commissioned a single nuclear power plant, which was years behind schedule and billions over budget. China's nuclear reactors are newer and more efficient than most American ones, which were mostly constructed in the 1960s and 1970s. Beijing is also a pioneer in the development of Small Modular Reactors, which are a fraction of the size of traditional reactors and can be assembled in a factory before being shipped elsewhere to begin generation. China's 'Linglong One' was the world's first operable commercial SMR, with the second being in Russia. The U.S.'s first commercial SMR is not expected to come online until 2027. Images of modern Chinese cities interspersed with green energy projects are a vital component of China's soft power. They often feature in Beijing's messaging to the global south. getty Why the U.S. Loses from Being Disengaged in Climate Policy This array of investments and accomplishments is more than just sound economic policy stemming from the self-evident rationale that cheaper energy means a stronger economy. Energy policy and high-tech energy component exports provide China with an opportunity to move up the value-added chain for exports and reshape the evolving international energy ecosystem. China is exploiting an opening that has been created as the U.S. has shown disinterest in engaging its European allies in renewable energy. Approximately $8 billion worth of climate tech projects in the U.S. have been downsized or cancelled in 2025 as China and Europe continue to expand cooperation in the field. While China has made considerable strides in green energy, it is essential to remember that China is not a green utopia. China is the world's largest producer of green energy, but it also emits more greenhouse gas than any other country in the world. China playing ball with the Europeans certainly reflects its commitment to and heavy investment in clean energy and a green transition. It also reflects Beijing's inability to unilaterally act and reshape international energy demands – meaning the U.S. both has the time and potential to prevent Chinese dominance in the energy sector. Renewable energy is also a key aspect of China's soft power abroad. China has invested in renewable energy developments in Asia, Africa, and the Americas, gaining control of key supply chains in developing countries as their demand for electricity grows. Additionally, China aims to sell 30 nuclear reactors to countries through its Belt and Road Initiative by 2030, once again expanding its global footprint through energy development. Its footprint was even growing in the EU before the summit, as Chinese electric vehicle manufacturers captured market shares in several European economies. China's ever-growing influence in the climate sector is poised to leave the U.S. in the dust so long as Washington's energy policy draws more on nostalgia than foresight. Regardless of the priorities of the Trump administration in the energy sector, advancement in green technology is critical to remain competitive with China. Beijing's supply of renewable technology has boosted its position in the global economy and on the diplomatic stage. Though the current American strategy emphasizes the utilization of its oil and gas resources, an 'all of the above' strategy must also include investment into solar, wind, and especially nuclear tech to ensure the country can compete with the Chinese juggernaut in the energy transition megatrend.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store