India's Robot Sales Surged by 30 Percent – Says IFR

Broken down by industry, India´s automotive sector is the main end user with a share of 62 percent of the total supply in 2017. Sales rose by 27 percent (2016-2017).

Sales of industrial robots in India reached a new record of 3,412 new units installed in 2017. That is an increase of 30 percent compared to the previous year (2016: 2,627 units). Between 2012 and 2017 India saw a compound annual sales growth rate (CAGR) of 18 percent. These are the initial findings of the World Robotics Report 2018, published by the International Federation of Robotics (IFR).


Broken down by industry, India's automotive sector is the main end user with a share of 62 percent of the total supply in 2017. Sales rose by 27 percent (2016-2017).

India's automotive industry announces expansion

"The automotive industry will remain the main driver of the increasing number of robot installations in India," says Junji Tsuda, president of the International Federation of Robotics. "Numerous new projects have been announced by international and domestic car manufacturers striving to expand production capacities. Moreover, OEMs increasingly require local supply of automotive parts."

General industry is catching up

A clear sign that the general industry is catching up with the automotive sector can be seen by the sales numbers of industrial robots in e.g. the plastics and rubber industry, the metal industry and the electrical and electronics industry, which increased by 46 percent in 2017.

"The general industry will further invest in production capacities and modernization to serve this growing consumer market," says IFR President Junji Tsuda. "Consequently, further acceleration of the growth in robot sales is expected between 2018 and 2021."

India's robot success story started in 2009 - robot density still low

India is one of the strongest growing economies among emerging Asian markets. Since 2009, the number of robot installations has been growing rapidly. In 2017, India ranked No. 14 in terms of the global annual supply, immediately behind Thailand and Spain. As far as the operational stock is concerned, India ranked thirteenth after Canada, Spain and Singapore.

India's automation potential is best illustrated by it's rather low robot density figure: 85 industrial robots per 10,000 employees in the automotive industry is less than a quarter of that in Indonesia (378 units) and far away from China (505 units).


About IFR

The International Federation of Robotics: www.ifr.org

Featured Product

Schmalz Technology Development - The Right Gripper for Every Task

Schmalz Technology Development - The Right Gripper for Every Task

In order to interact with their environment and perform the tasks, lightweight robots, like all industrial robots, depend on tools - and in many cases these are vacuum grippers. These form the interface to the workpiece and are therefore a decisive part of the overall system. With their help, the robots can pick up, move, position, process, sort, stack and deposit a wide variety of goods and components. Vacuum gripping systems allow particularly gentle handling of workpieces, a compact and space-saving system design and gripping from above. Precisely because the object does not have to be gripped, the vacuum suction cupenables gapless positioning next to each other.