Experts suggest physical AI could lead to AGI

Experts argue that physical AI, involving robots and autonomous machines interacting with the real world, may provide a direct path to artificial general intelligence. Elon Musk's comments on Tesla's Optimus robots highlight this potential, amid growing investments in related technologies. The year 2026 is seen as a key inflection point for the field.

Elon Musk recently stated that Tesla’s Optimus robots could one day achieve artificial general intelligence, sparking discussion on the role of physical AI. Physical AI encompasses systems that go beyond content generation to operate in real environments, including robots, autonomous machines, and the foundational models that guide their behavior.

The momentum in physical AI has built over years, with 2026 marking a significant inflection point. At CES in January, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang declared that the ChatGPT moment for robotics had arrived, pointing to the potential for AI models combined with computing infrastructure to enable large-scale commercial adoption.

Key investments focus on models that help machines interpret and respond to their surroundings. Nvidia has introduced Cosmos and GR00T, open models designed for robot learning and reasoning, along with the Blackwell-powered Jetson T4000 module for industrial edge applications. These tools form a robotics operating system, with partners such as Boston Dynamics, Caterpillar, and LG Electronics already integrating them.

Google integrated its robotics software unit Intrinsic fully in-house from Alphabet earlier this year, creating a vertically integrated stack from foundation models to deployment software and cloud infrastructure.

Deployment data underscores the competition. In 2025, global humanoid robot installations reached approximately 16,000 units, with China accounting for more than 80% in logistics, manufacturing, and automotive sectors. Morgan Stanley data indicates China filed 7,705 humanoid patents over five years, five times the U.S. total, and held 54% of global industrial robot installations. Chinese firms like Unitree shipped roughly 36 times more units last year than U.S. rivals Figure and Tesla combined, benefiting from domestic production of components like motors, sensors, and harmonic reducers.

This scale generates valuable data for improving models, as robots in real environments provide training signals that enhance future iterations. Tesla plans to deploy Optimus robots in its factories to perform tasks and collect data for software refinement.

A Deloitte survey of more than 3,200 global business leaders found that 58% are already using physical AI in some form, with expectations of 80% adoption within two years. This infrastructure buildout supports the thesis that physical AI could underpin broader intelligence advancements.

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Tesla CEO Elon Musk declared on March 4, 2026, via X that the company will achieve artificial general intelligence (AGI) and likely be first to embody it in a humanoid or atom-shaping form through its Optimus robots. This ties into plans for Optimus Gen 3 production starting in Q1 2026, amid ambitious timelines and Tesla's robotics push.

Analysts at Barclays forecast that the physical AI sector, encompassing robots and robotaxis, could reach a $1 trillion market value by 2035. This projection highlights advances in AI-enabled robotics and may support Tesla CEO Elon Musk's ambitions for substantial wealth growth. The report attributes this potential to improvements in computational power, mechanical capabilities, and battery technology.

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Experts foresee 2026 as the pivotal year for world models, AI systems designed to comprehend the physical world more deeply than large language models. These models aim to ground AI in reality, enabling advancements in robotics and autonomous vehicles. Industry leaders like Yann LeCun and Fei-Fei Li highlight their potential to revolutionize spatial intelligence.

Elon Musk addressed xAI employees at a companywide meeting in San Francisco last week, expressing optimism about the firm's future in the race for artificial general intelligence. He emphasized the importance of scaling data centers and securing funding to outpace competitors. Musk also speculated on innovative ideas like space-based data centers.

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Building on 2025's dominance with over 90% global market share, Chinese humanoid robots drew major attention at CES and China's Lunar New Year Gala in early 2026. Tesla's Optimus remains in limited production amid delays, with mass deployment eyed for 2027 or later. Analyst Lian Jye Su highlights China's manufacturing scale while noting U.S. software strengths in the intensifying competition.

At Tesla's 2025 annual shareholder meeting, Elon Musk unveiled ambitious plans for the Optimus humanoid robot, stating it would eliminate poverty and provide superior medical care. Shareholders approved Musk's $1 trillion performance-based pay package, which includes targets for delivering one million Optimus units over the next decade. Musk highlighted the robot's potential to transform the economy through sustainable abundance.

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Tesla is redirecting resources away from expanding car model variants in China to bolster investments in artificial intelligence, robotics, and energy systems starting in 2026. Global Vice President Tao Lin announced that the company's capital spending will surpass $20 billion globally, with significant focus on China. This shift positions Tesla as a broader technology firm beyond electric vehicles.

 

 

 

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