
AGIBOT is taking its embodied AI expansion deeper into Southeast Asia, using a partner conference in Jakarta to lay out plans for robot deployment in Indonesia.
The company hosted AGIBOT Partner Conference 2026 Indonesia with local strategic partner Denka Pratama Indonesia. The event brought together about 300 guests from the local technology, business, and partner ecosystem to discuss how embodied AI and humanoid robotics could be used across Indonesian industries.
For AGIBOT, this was not just a brand showcase. The company framed the event as part of a long-term push to build a local robotics ecosystem in Indonesia and across the Asia-Pacific region. The focus was on practical deployment, not just lab demonstrations.
Abel Deng, president of AGIBOT’s Middle East and Asia Pacific region, said the company is bringing embodied AI into a “deployment-ready stage” in Indonesia. He also said AGIBOT is introducing a Robot as a Service leasing model in the market, which could lower the upfront cost for companies that want to test or adopt robots.
That leasing model may be one of the more important pieces of the announcement. Buying humanoid robots outright can be expensive and risky for companies still figuring out where robots fit. A RaaS model gives businesses a way to try robots in real environments without treating the purchase like a giant bet on unproven automation.
AGIBOT and Denka say they will work together on product portfolios and scenario-specific solutions for Indonesian enterprises. At the conference, AGIBOT introduced its XYZ Curve for embodied AI industry development and presented seven productivity scenarios for robot deployment.
Those scenarios were not fully detailed in the announcement, but the direction is clear. AGIBOT wants its robots to be used in real industrial and service settings, where they can support automation, service innovation, and productivity growth. That could include factories, commercial environments, logistics, cleaning, inspection, and other labor-heavy operations where embodied AI has a path to usefulness.
Denka Pratama Indonesia brings the local network. The company says it has more than 10 years of experience in distribution and channel development, along with nationwide partner resources and local service capabilities. AGIBOT brings the robot portfolio, including humanoids, quadrupeds, dexterous systems, and commercial cleaning robots.
The timing also fits AGIBOT’s broader growth story. In March 2026, the company said its 10,000th robot had rolled off the production line, showing that AGIBOT is trying to move beyond prototypes and into larger-scale production.
Indonesia gives AGIBOT a market where labor, infrastructure, services, and industrial modernization are all in play. It also gives the company a chance to prove that embodied AI can be localized through partners instead of simply exported as a one-size-fits-all robot product.
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