Exporter or importer? It is time to secure U.S. leadership in robotics


By Andrew Borene



Best
Defense office of non-human resources



In
the coming decade we face an economic choice. If America buys robots from the
world, America saves millions of dollars and nets some efficiency gain. If we
make and sell robots to the world, America creates millions of jobs in a
technology revolution.



Let's
exert some national energy on developing a U.S. strategy for global leadership in
robotics. Like computer science in the 1980's, today's robotics technologies
are becoming an important piece of our economic infrastructure -- if we
ignore this trend it will be a great lost opportunity for our nation.



The
time is now to secure America's place in the supply-side of the global robotics
economic curve. America's leadership needs to start thinking about how we can
design, build, and service robots in the U.S., and sell them around the world.



Global demand for robotics is surging. In our lifetime, all developed countries
will be forced into positions as net robotics consumers or net robotics
producers. All will benefit, but the robotics producers will be on the
receiving end of millions of high-paying jobs to be created in the coming
decades.



Europe, Japan, and South Korea are well aware of these 21st
century opportunities. The South Koreans have already committed government
investment on the order of $750 million into the very broad mission of becoming
the world's #1 robot exporter. This year, the U.S. is looking at about $70
million in a narrowly-focused president's National Robotics Initiative.



Predator drones have increasingly grabbed international headlines, but the
urgent need for government action in robotics is not on military frontlines --
it's on American assembly lines.



The
Economist magazine's recent quarterly technology report included a breakout
section on robotics in war and the important considerations about using deadly
force and international humanitarian law. The documented rapid proliferation of
military robotic systems raises important policy and ethical considerations as
these technologies become larger parts of military, security and police force
structures around the world.



Yet a narrow focus on military robotics will distract us from the enormous
benefits robots and robot-assisted solutions already also provide in
agriculture, medicine, manufacturing, and other industries around the world.
Soon robots will also move into U.S. civilian transportation arenas, whether by
air (as a result of the recent FAA bill which opens civilian U.S. airspace to
drones) or on the ground (with self-park technologies embedded in automobiles
and Google's driverless cars).



American
leadership should be focused on developing more stories like the headline, "From
Rust Belt to Drone Belt" in the Atlantic magazine, which
highlights one Midwestern community college's efforts to train workers for the
robotic economy of the future.



What's needed now is action to establish the United States as a strong leader
in the robotics industry. Improved science education, forward-looking
industrial development, and partnerships that bring international elements from
the private sector together with government and scientific community leaders
are well advised.



Andrew Borene is an executive at ReconRobotics, Inc. in Edina, Minnesota
and adjunct professor of political science at Macalester College. He is the
Executive Director of 
RoboticsAlley.org

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Published on August 08, 2012 04:40
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