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News
Future Horizons Predicts Consumer Robotics Will Fuel
Electronics Growth (5/4/2004)
Future Horizons, Europe's leading semiconductor
analyst, today predicted that robots will become mainstream consumer
products within the next decade, providing a significant growth
opportunity for the electronics sector.
In its 2004 Key Market Driver Report, Future
Horizon predicts that the total revenue for the robotics market
will rise from $4.4 billion in 2003 to $59.3 billion in 2010. It
forecasts that the corresponding electronic component of the market
will increase from $398 million in 2003 to nearly $24 billion in
2010 as a result of growth in the market and the increase requirement
for computer power.
The report contends that the electronics
industry is on the cusp of a robotics wave, a period in which applications
are aimed at human labour saving and extending human skills. It
states that the market need, technology and economical justification
have coincided to create a new electro mechanical robot system,
with the prospect of a corresponding new electronics market to follow.
"Despite 50 years of development, the robotic
market is still in its early stages with companies still trying
to define requirements. But the mechanics, electronics and software
required to make a powerful robots with huge consumer appeal for
domestic applications. Robotics will fuel a wave of growth in the
electronics sector over the coming decade," said Malcolm Penn, chief
executive office, Future Horizons.
Future Horizons claims that the heavy industrial
and professional intelligent service robots currently dominate the
robotics market by unit volume, each accounting for 100,000 units
annually, with domestic appliance and domestic intelligent service
robots yet to make significant inroads.
But the report states that the emphasis will
reverse by 2005 as domestic robotics start to dominate the market.
The delivery in 2003 of the Sony AIBO robot and several robot lawn
mowers and robot vacuum cleaners provides an early indication of
likely growth.
Future Horizons predicts that by 2010 the
$59.3 billion worldwide robotic market will equate to 55.5 million
units made up of domestic robots accounting for 39 million units;
domestic intelligent service robots accounting for 10.5 million
units; professional intelligent service robots accounting for 5.8
million units; and accounting for heavy industrial robots 200,000
units.
www.futurehorizons.com
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