Quick Read
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Jim Farley warned China holds enough existing factory capacity to serve the entire North American auto market and eliminate Ford.
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Rockwell Automation (ROK) and NVIDIA (NVDA) are already booking orders as the supply chain feeding America’s dark factory race grows now.
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No dark factory exists in the US yet, but analysts predict at least one fully automated automotive assembly line by 2030.
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When Ford CEO Jim Farley returned from a factory tour in China, he described what he saw as “the most humbling thing I’ve ever seen”. He told interviewers that Chinese vehicles’ cost and quality are “far superior to what I see in the West” and warned, “We are in a global competition with China, and it’s not just EVs. And if we lose this, we do not have a future at Ford.” China, he added, has “enough capacity in China with existing factories to serve the entire North American market, put us all out of business.”
Octopus Energy chief Greg Jackson recounted touring a fully automated Chinese phone factory with virtually no human involvement. Fortescue founder Andrew Forrest said his own China trip led him to abandon plans to build EV powertrains in-house. What rattled all three was the same thing: the “dark factory,” a fully automated plant that needs no lighting because no humans work the floor.
The Scale Of China’s Lead
The numbers explain the C-suite panic. China operated more than 1.75 million industrial robots as of 2023, roughly 51% of global robot demand, with a robot density of 470 per 10,000 manufacturing workers, ahead of Germany and the United States. That is the installed base American manufacturers are working to catch.
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The US Race Is Just Beginning
No fully automated dark factory exists yet in the US. Analysts cited by Automotive News predict at least one fully automated automotive assembly line, in the US or China, by 2030. In the meantime, twelve of the world’s top 25 automakers are running advanced robotic pilot programs, including humanoid robots, on production lines.
The most concrete US data point sits in Hayward, California, where 1X Technologies, backed by OpenAI, has launched full-scale production at a 58,000-square-foot NEO humanoid robot factory, described as the most vertically integrated humanoid robot facility in the US, targeting 10,000 units in its first year and scaling toward 100,000 units by the end of 2027. That plant builds robots; it is not itself a dark factory. Hyundai has announced plans to build 30,000 Atlas humanoid robots per year by 2028 for its own factories, and Tesla is producing Optimus robots on a limited scale in California.