Entertainment

Samsung Electronics Announces Strategy ToTransition Global Manufacturing Into ‘ AI-Driven Factories’ by 2030

Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. just dropped a massive announcement, and honestly, it feels like a plot twist in a sci-fi blockbuster.

The tech giant is officially transforming all its global manufacturing sites into AI-Driven Factories by 2030; think autonomous production, digital twins, and robots that actually do stuff, not just look cool in movies.

Samsung is infusing AI into every corner of the manufacturing universe: materials coming in, products being built, quality checks, and even the last-mile shipment. The goal? A next-gen factory ecosystem that basically runs itself; smarter, faster, safer.

To make this happen, Samsung will roll out digital twin simulations across its production floors and deploy specialised AI agents that take charge of quality control, logistics, and operations.

These agents analyse data like pros, predict issues before they happen, and fine-tune every process for maximum efficiency. It’s giving “zero downtime, zero drama.”

Samsung is also upgrading its Environmental, Health, and Safety game. With proactive detection systems and automated hazard prevention, the company wants every production site to be safer like having a 24/7 guardian that never sleeps.

At the heart of this shift is Agentic AI, first introduced on the Galaxy S26 series. This isn’t regular AI; this is “I can plan, make decisions, and optimise myself” AI. After powering your phone, it’s now powering entire factories. Love that for them.

Robots, Autonomy & a Whole New Era of Production

And yes, Samsung is going full robotics mode. The company is rolling out a whole squad of humanoid and specialised robots:

  • Operating Robots for running production lines
  • Logistics Robots for carrying stuff around
  • Assembly Robots for precision tasks
  • Environmental Safety Robots with digital twin integration to monitor and neutralise risks

Basically, imagine a factory where every robot knows its job, never gets tired, and always plays well with the team.

According to YoungSoo Lee, EVP and Head of Global Technology Research,

“The next phase of manufacturing innovation lies in building autonomous environments where AI truly understands what’s happening in real time.”

In short: AI is not just assisting; it’s leading.

Global Industry Flex

Samsung will put its industrial AI vision on full display at MWC Barcelona 2026, showing how digital twins and autonomous systems can level up safety and efficiency in real-world industries.

The company will also unveil its AI autonomy governance strategy at the Samsung Mobile Business Summit (SMBS), celebrating its 10th year.

SMBS is an invite-only B2B gathering where Samsung shares its roadmap and collaborates with major industry players, very “inner circle, VIP access only.”

With all this, Samsung isn’t just building factories. It’s building the blueprint for the next era of manufacturing and honestly, it feels like the future we see in movies, but happening in real life.

Shahzlin Saffaa

Recent Posts

ADIDAS Malaysia Brings The Ultimate Race-Day Experience To Score Marathon 2026

PUTRAJAYA, 14 JULY 2026 - As the Official Sportswear Partner of SCORE Marathon 2026, adidas… Read More

10 hours ago

What’s the Next Big Bubble Tea Topping in Malaysia?

Kuala Lumpur, 13 July 2026 —Tapioca pearls have dominated the bubble tea scene for more… Read More

15 hours ago

Batik Air, IJN and Tourism Malaysia Partner to Advance Accessible Heart Care and Medical Tourism

KUALA LUMPUR, 9 JULY 2026 – Batik Air Malaysia and Institut Jantung Negara (IJN),  supported… Read More

16 hours ago

From Street to Sleep : UNIQLO’s Take on the New Everyday Dress Code for Dayjama

July 10, 2026, Kuala Lumpur – Global apparel retailer UNIQLO introduces its latest Women’s Innerwear… Read More

17 hours ago

Yes Travel Brings Learning Beyond the Classroom to Underprivileged Students

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, July 13, 2026 – Yes Travel & Holidays Sdn. Bhd. ("Yes Travel")… Read More

1 day ago

This website uses cookies.