Based on the State of AI in Europe. The invisible giant Report 2026
Research & ecosystem positioning
- Zurich is a leading European hub for deep tech and AI research, alongside Munich
- It ranks among Europe’s core AI ecosystem cities, including London, Paris, Berlin, Amsterdam, Munich and Stockholm.
- Successes:
- Auterion
- Acronis
- Scandit
- 2 rising stars in robotics out of 6:
- RIVR
- Flexion Robotics
Talent and ecosystem scale
- Zurich ranks:
- 3rd in Europe for AI practitioners (2.6% of Europe)
- 8th for frontier AI talent (1.8% of Europe)
- Hosts:
- 198 VC-backed startups
- $12B combined enterprise value
- $378M VC funding in 2025
Switzerland (presented via Zurich) is a high-quality, research-driven robotics and AI node, rather than a scale-driven capital hub.
Europe’s Robotics Strength (Global Context)
Core competitive advantage
- Europe shows “genuine competitive strength in robotics, AI manufacturing, and deep tech applications”
Talent leadership in robotics-related domains
According to talent distribution data (page 38):
- Europe holds ~50%+ share in next-wave AI skills, including:
- Robotic interaction: 50%
- Robotic grasping: 53%
- AI manufacturing: 50%
- Autonomous vehicles: 49%
Robotics within AI Investment and Applications
Position in AI funding landscape
- >75% of European AI funding targets vertical applications, including:
- Health
- Energy
- Defence & security
- Fintech
- Robotics
- Robotics and autonomous driving are explicitly listed among the largest AI application segments in 2025
Strategic positioning
- Europe is shifting toward:
- Applied, domain-specific AI
- Physical-world systems (robots, manufacturing, autonomy)
- The report highlights robotics as part of the “next wave” of AI, alongside:
- Autonomous vehicles
- AI-enabled manufacturing
International Comparison
Europe vs US & China
- Europe:
- Strong in robotics, industrial AI, and deep tech applications
- Weaker in:
- Foundational AI models
- Compute infrastructure
- US:
- Dominates capital, hyperscalers, and large-scale AI companies
- China:
- Strong in scaling and infrastructure
Structural Constraints Affecting Robotics
Capital gap
- Europe invests:
- 3× less at breakout stage
- 9–12× less at late stage vs US
Impact: Robotics startups often:
- Scale abroad
- Rely on foreign capital
Talent allocation issue
- 53% of AI talent in Europe is in traditional industries (vs 40% US)
Implication:
- Robotics talent is often used for:
- Industrial optimisation
- Legacy sectors rather than building global-scale robotics platforms.
Strategic Role of Robotics in Europe
The report positions robotics as central to Europe’s future AI strategy:
Key opportunity areas
- World Models (“AI for robots”)
- AI-enabled manufacturing
- Autonomous systems
- Energy and defence applications
Strategic recommendation
Europe should:
- “Own the next wave of AI” through:
- Robotics
- Physical AI systems
- Industrial applications