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FieldAI's valuation quadruples to $2 billion
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Startup focuses on monitoring tasks in dirty, dull,
dangerous
environments
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Software-centric approach allows for more deployment, data
collection
By Krystal Hu
Aug 20 (Reuters) - FieldAI, which develops systems for
robots to operate safely in industrial environments, has raised
$314 million in a new funding round, quadrupling its valuation,
sources with knowledge of the matter said.
The Irvine, California-based startup is now valued at $2
billion, up from $500 million in a round last year, they added.
FieldAI said it has raised $405 million over two funding
rounds to scale its artificial intelligence platform but did not
break out its latest financing. It added that backers include
Khosla Ventures, Nvidia's ( NVDA ) NVentures, Bezos Expeditions, Canaan
Partners and Intel Capital.
The startup, founded in 2023, has gained attention as it
focuses on software that can be installed on a wide range of
hardware, allowing it and its clients to use the most
cost-effective robots which accelerates deployment. That
contrasts with vertically integrated companies that build their
hardware and software, such as Figure AI.
FieldAI's current focus is on enabling robots to perform
monitoring and surveying tasks in "dirty, dull, dangerous"
environments, with a long-term goal of expanding into more
complex, action-based capabilities.
CEO Ali Agha, a former robotics technologist at NASA, said in an
interview that the financing will help the company expand its
team. It had about 30 people at the end of 2024 and grew to 130
this year, and plans to double headcount by the end of 2025 to
support multi-million-dollar contracts in the U.S., Europe and
Asia.
He added that FieldAI's technology differentiates itself
from other AI models because it integrates physics principles to
manage risk in a changing environment, allowing robots to
operate more safely without needing pre-mapped environments.
"In robotics, there are consequences to actions, so managing
that risk is the fundamental gap today," Agha said.
Kanu Gulati, a partner at Khosla Ventures, said FieldAI was
attractive because one of the robotics industry's main
bottlenecks to further development was the lack of real world
data.
"The bigger story for me is getting more robots deployed
that are collecting more data, and then they can be in the pole
position to win," she said.
Global funding in robotics surged to $18.6 billion in 2024,
a 116% increase from the previous year, according to a report by
F-Prime Capital.