The Great Robot Baggage Claim Experiment
Japan Airlines is about to strap some seriously expensive bipedal machines to airport duty at Tokyo’s Haneda. Starting May 2026, the airline will test two humanoid robots — Unitree’s G1 and UBTECH’s Walker E — handling luggage, cleaning cabins, and pushing cargo containers. It’s the latest desperate lurch to patch a gaping labor shortage that has crippled Japanese ground crew numbers since 2019, when Narita Airport started turning away over 30% of requested flights. But before you imagine a fleet of efficient automatons, consider the actual footage: a robot wobbling up to a cargo container, making a vaguely theatrical pushing gesture, as a human worker actually triggers the conveyor belt. The robot barely touched it.
The PR vs. The Reality
This demo is not about solving logistics; it is about optics. The press release touts “AI powered adaptation” to messy human environments, a claim that conveniently ignores that the robots cost tens of thousands of dollars each (the cheapest G1 runs $13,500) and have yet to prove they can survive an airport tripping hazard, let alone handle a shifting baggage cart. The real safety calculus begins with deciding which airport zones are least likely to swallow a humanoid robot in a hydraulic death spiral. Until then, the only thing being sorted is the narrative: desperate airlines are throwing humanoid hype at a broken system, and the robots are barely pushing back.
The Bottom Line on Bipedal Labor
Japan’s ground crew crisis is real, but treating humanoid robots as the Band-Aid reveals a worrying disconnect. We are a long way from the sci-fi promise of tireless helpers. Right now, the most productive thing these machines do is generate headlines. The 2028 trial window is generous, but the window to convince skeptical travelers that their bags won’t end up in a heap involving a confused $13,500 robot with poor balance is much, much shorter.
Source: Arstechnica
