Japan deploys humanoid robot for rail upkeep
Amid worker shortage in ageing nation

Japan deploys humanoid robot for rail upkeep

/ 05:32 AM July 05, 2024

Japan deploys humanoid robot for rail upkeep

This photo taken on June 23, 2024 shows a woman walking down steps next to Nishi-Nippori station, one of 30 stations along the JR Yamanote Line in Tokyo. – (Photo by RICHARD A. BROOKS / AFP)

TOKYO — It resembles a malevolent robot from 1980s sci-fi but West Japan Railway’s new humanoid employee was designed with nothing more sinister than a spot of painting and gardening in mind.

Starting this month, the machine with a crude head and coke-bottle eyes mounted on a truck—which can drive on rails—will be put to use for maintenance work on the firm’s network.

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Its operator sits in a cockpit on the truck, “seeing” through the robot’s eyes via cameras and operating its powerful limbs and hands remotely.

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With a vertical reach of 12 meters, the machine can use various attachments for its arms to carry objects as heavy as 40 kilograms, hold a brush to paint, or use a chainsaw.

For now, the robot’s primary task will focus on trimming tree branches along rails and painting metal frames that hold cables above trains, the company said.

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The technology will help fill worker shortages in aging Japan as well as reduce accidents such as workers falling from high places or suffering electric shocks, the company says.

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“In the future, we hope to use machines for all kinds of maintenance operations of our infrastructure,” and this should provide a case study for how to deal with the labor shortage, company president Kazuaki Hasegawa told a recent press conference.

READ: China is closer to building a brain-controlled robot

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TAGS: Japan, robotics

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