Japan is reportedly planning to acquire 27,500 of Nvidia’s next-generation Rubin chips as the country accelerates its push to become a global leader in AI-powered robotics. The move would represent one of the largest single government commitments to Nvidia’s newest platform, which promises up to 5x higher AI compute performance over prior generations.
The 10 million robot plan
On July 1, the Japanese government unveiled an ambitious national strategy targeting the deployment of approximately 10 million AI-equipped robots across 18 sectors by 2040, including manufacturing, healthcare, logistics, and agriculture.
The strategy comes paired with roughly $6 billion in planned investment to develop a domestic AI model through the Noetra consortium. That group includes some of Japan’s heaviest hitters: SoftBank and Sony among them.
The Rubin chip acquisition would serve as hardware backbone for this initiative. Nvidia’s Rubin platform, featuring the Vera Rubin superchip, was announced on January 5, with full production and partner availability expected in the second half of 2026.
On July 15, a who’s-who of Japanese robotics firms, including Fanuc, Yaskawa, Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Fujitsu, SoftBank, and Sony, announced collaboration plans to build on Nvidia’s physical AI platforms.
Why this matters beyond Tokyo
Japan already leads the world in industrial robot density. The Rubin chip acquisition signals a shift from traditional robotics toward AI-native systems, robots that don’t just follow pre-programmed instructions but learn, adapt, and make decisions in real time.
A broader Nvidia-Fujitsu AI infrastructure partnership, announced in 2025, already targets Japan’s leadership in AI and robotics by 2030. That deal received backing from Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s administration.
What this means for investors
Fujitsu, Fanuc, Yaskawa, Kawasaki Heavy Industries, SoftBank, and Sony are all positioned to capture value from this initiative. The $6 billion earmarked for the Noetra consortium’s domestic AI model represents real capital flowing into these companies’ AI divisions.
One caveat worth noting: the specific quantity of 27,500 chips has not received verified public confirmation as of mid-July 2026. Investors should watch for official procurement announcements from the Japanese government or Nvidia to validate the figure before sizing positions around it.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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