Japan tests robot baggage handlers at Tokyo airport
AI-summarised brief · reviewed before publication
Tokyo's Haneda airport, the world's third busiest in 2025, is introducing humanoid robot baggage handlers to address labor shortages. The trial, set to begin in early May, will run through 2028 and deploy robots to perform rote tasks within the airport's ground services team. The robots, manufactured by Unitree, will assist with tasks such as moving baggage and custodial duties, but humans will continue to oversee key tasks like safety management.
💡 Why It Matters
- · Japan isn't testing airport robots as a curiosity — it's doing it out of demographic necessity.
- · With one of the world's most acute labor shortages and a cultural resistance to large-scale immigration, Japan has more urgency than almost any other country to make robots work in unglamorous, physically demanding roles.
- · Haneda is a high-visibility proof point for a strategy the entire Japanese economy is depending on.