Operational Excellence (OPEX) Daily Briefing – Thursday, December 25, 2025: Fujitsu Integrates Physical AI Into Manufacturing And Logistics, Turning AI Into An On-The-Ground Operating Capability.
Điểm Tin Operational Excellence (OPEX) Mỗi Ngày – Thứ Năm, Ngày 25/12/2025: Fujitsu Tích Hợp Physical AI Vào Sản Xuất Và Logistics: Khi AI Trở Thành Năng Lực Vận Hành Thực Địa.
Welcome to my unique weekday article for the paid subscriber-only edition.
Operational Excellence (OPEX) Daily Briefing – issued on weekdays (Monday to Friday).
Điểm tin Operational Excellence (OPEX) hằng ngày (phát hành các ngày thứ Hai đến thứ Sáu).
This is the bilingual post in English and Vietnamese. Vietnamese is below.
Đây là bài viết song ngữ Anh-Việt. Tiếng Việt ở bên dưới.
English
PART 1 – OFFICIAL INFORMATION
In late December 2025, Fujitsu officially announced the development of the Fujitsu Kozuchi Physical AI 1.0 platform, marking a significant milestone in the company’s strategy to integrate artificial intelligence into physical operations such as manufacturing, logistics, and supply chain management. This information was disclosed in an official statement released by Fujitsu to the global market, emphasizing a strategic shift to expand AI beyond software environments into real-world operational systems.
According to Fujitsu’s announcement, Kozuchi Physical AI 1.0 is a platform designed to combine physical-impact AI with agent-based AI, enabling artificial intelligence not only to analyze data but also to participate directly in coordination and decision support for physical activities such as factory operations, warehouse management, and industrial robot orchestration. This initiative forms part of Fujitsu’s long-term strategy to build AI systems that operate safely, reliably, and in close alignment with enterprise operations.
Fujitsu stated that the platform was developed through a strategic collaboration with NVIDIA, leveraging NVIDIA’s advanced AI software technologies and infrastructure to ensure real-time processing capabilities, high stability, and scalability in industrial environments. This collaboration had previously been announced by both companies as part of global partnership agreements focused on AI infrastructure and enterprise AI, with Fujitsu concentrating on practical deployment in manufacturing and logistics sectors.
From a technological perspective, Fujitsu Kozuchi Physical AI 1.0 is built as a multi-agent platform, allowing multiple AI modules to cooperate within a single operating system. Fujitsu emphasized that the platform can connect AI agents with robots, automated equipment, logistics systems, and production lines, thereby supporting the automation of complex operations that previously required extensive manual intervention. These AI agents are capable of processing operational data, proposing coordination strategies, and supporting decision-making based on real-time data.
According to the technical information released by Fujitsu, Kozuchi Physical AI 1.0 is designed with a high-security architecture, suitable for enterprise environments with strict requirements for data security and regulatory compliance. The platform enables access control, decision traceability, and data flow management among AI agents, allowing enterprises to maintain operational control even as AI becomes deeply involved in coordination processes.
Fujitsu also reported that internal trials and pilot projects demonstrated the platform’s ability to significantly reduce repetitive operational workloads, improve coordination accuracy in manufacturing and logistics, and reduce errors arising from manual operations. These results have been presented by Fujitsu as evidence of the platform’s real-world applicability in large-scale enterprise environments.
According to the published roadmap, Fujitsu plans to continue expanding Kozuchi Physical AI in the coming years, with the objective of enabling AI to play a deeper role in robot coordination, material flow optimization, production planning, and flexible responses to supply chain volatility. Fujitsu emphasized that the platform’s focus is not on technology demonstration, but on improving operational efficiency, reducing risk, and enhancing enterprise adaptability in volatile market conditions.
Through the announcement of Fujitsu Kozuchi Physical AI 1.0, Fujitsu clearly signals a broader trend: AI is being pushed beyond purely software-based applications to become a direct component of physical operating systems, where performance, reliability, and controllability are decisive factors for modern enterprises.




