Next 5 years will shape robotics future: WEF warns of diverging global paths

Business Monday 27/April/2026 14:16 PM
By: ANI
Next 5 years will shape robotics future: WEF warns of diverging global paths

New Delhi: The next five years will be crucial in determining how physical autonomous systems evolve globally by 2031, according to a World Economic Forum (WEF) report.

The report states that the future of robotics will largely depend on two key factors, technological innovation and societal acceptance, leading to four possible scenarios.

Among these, "proven deployment" and "tech disillusionment" are seen as the most likely outcomes. In the proven deployment scenario, robotics grows steadily in controlled environments such as logistics, ports, and mining, with stable public trust. In contrast, tech disillusionment may arise if expectations are not met, resulting in reduced investment and limited industrial use.

According to the WEF, in a proven deployment scenario, robotics advances steadily within structured environments like ports, logistics, and mining where outcomes are predictable. Public acceptance remains stable because the technology is viewed as dependable infrastructure rather than a disruptive force.

Conversely, tech disillusionment occurs if overpromising erodes confidence, causing public interest to fade and robotics to retreat into niche industrial uses as funding contracts and markets consolidate.

WEF outlined a third path, "integrated progress," representing a desirable but currently distant scenario where technological breakthroughs align with social readiness. Here, robotics supports people in healthcare and construction through shared oversight and transparent evidence of safety.

However, the report also warned of "divided deployment," where advanced robotics reaches high levels of autonomy but remains fragmented across global power blocs. In this future, a few major actors hold most of the data and supply chains, potentially widening economic disparities and creating tension between technological progress and public accountability.

"Advanced robotics reaches remarkable levels of autonomy, but deployment becomes fragmented across global power blocs and large private players. A few major actors hold most of the data, compute and supply chains, making the system powerful but opaque," the report stated.

The report emphasized that the coming five years are pivotal for shaping the trajectory of physical autonomy. Success depends on aligned incentives that reward safety and transparency rather than relying on goodwill alone. Stakeholders must focus on use-case-driven approaches to translate aspirational objectives into actionable and measurable practices.

This preparation involves strengthening the governance and institutional systems around the technology as much as the hardware itself.

According to the WEF, coordinated efforts today can help ensure that autonomous systems contribute to safer workplaces, resilient societies, and broader economic benefits.