CES 2026: Siemens, NVIDIA expand partnership to build industrial AI operating system

Companies look to optimize operations through shared innovation with AI

Siemens and PepsiCo

By Robotics 24/7 Staff    January 9, 2026         

CES 2026: Siemens, NVIDIA expand partnership to build industrial AI operating system

Siemens

At CES 2026, Siemens president and CEO Roland Busch (left) and NVIDIA founder and CEO Jensen Huang (right) announced the expansion of their partnership.

Email Sign Up

Get news, papers, media and research delivered. Sign up for our free newsletters.

Stay up-to-date with news and resources you need to do your job. Research industry trends, compare companies and get weekly market intelligence with Robotics 24/7.

Robotics 24/7 newsletter
CES 2026: Siemens, NVIDIA expand partnership to build industrial AI operating system

Siemens

At CES 2026, Siemens president and CEO Roland Busch (left) and NVIDIA founder and CEO Jensen Huang (right) announced the expansion of their partnership.

At CES 2026 in Las Vegas, Siemens and NVIDIA announced a significant expansion of their strategic partnership to bring artificial intelligence into the real world.

Together, the companies said that they aim to develop industrial and physical AI offerings that will bring AI-driven innovation to every industry and industrial workflow, as well as accelerate each other’s operations.

To support development, NVIDIA will provide AI infrastructure, simulation libraries, models, frameworks and blueprints while Siemens will commit hundreds of industrial AI experts and leading hardware and software.

Accelerating the entire industrial lifecycle

Siemens and NVIDIA said they will work together to build AI-accelerated industrial technologies across the full lifecycle of products and production, enabling faster innovation, continuous optimization and more resilient, sustainable manufacturing.

The companies aim to build the world’s first fully AI-driven, adaptive manufacturing sites globally, starting in 2026 with the Siemens Electronics Factory in Erlangen, Germany, as the first blueprint.

“Together, we are building the Industrial AI operating system - redefining how the physical world is designed, built and run - to scale AI and create real-world impact,” said Roland Busch, president and CEO of Siemens AG. “By combining NVIDIA’s leadership in accelerated computing and AI platforms with Siemens’ leading hardware, software, industrial AI and data, we’re empowering customers to develop products faster with the most comprehensive digital twins, adapt production in real time and accelerate technologies from chips to AI factories.”

Using an “AI Brain,” - powered by software-defined automation and industrial operations software, combined with NVIDIA Omniverse libraries and NVIDIA AI infrastructure, the companies said that factories can continuously analyze their digital twins, test improvements virtually and turn validated insights into operational changes on the shopfloor.

NVIDIA and Siemens said that this results in faster, more reliable decision-making from design to deployment - raising productivity while reducing commissioning time and risk. The companies aim to scale these capabilities across key verticals and several customers are already evaluating some of the capabilities including Foxconn, HD Hyundai, KION Group and PepsiCo.

With the partnership expansion, Siemens will complete GPU acceleration across its entire simulation portfolio and expand support for NVIDIA CUDA-X libraries and AI physics models, enabling customers to run larger, more accurate simulations faster. Building on that foundation, the companies said that they will advance toward generative simulation by using NVIDIA PhysicsNeMo™ and open models to provide autonomous digital twins that deliver real-time engineering design and autonomous optimization. 

Advancing electronic design automation for accelerated computing

By applying industrial AI operating logic to semiconductors and AI factories, Siemens and NVIDIA said they will accelerate the engines of the AI revolution. Starting with semiconductor design and building on NVIDIA’s extensive use of Siemens’ tools, Siemens will integrate NVIDIA CUDA-X libraries, PhysicsNeMo and GPU acceleration across its EDA portfolio with a focus on verification, layout and process optimization - to target 2-10x speedups in key workflows.

“Generative AI and accelerated computing have ignited a new industrial revolution, transforming digital twins from passive simulations into the active intelligence of the physical world,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “Our partnership with Siemens fuses the world’s leading industrial software with NVIDIA’s full-stack AI platform to close the gap between ideas and reality - empowering industries to simulate complex systems in software, then seamlessly automate and operate them in the physical world.”

The partnership will also add AI-assisted capabilities such as layout guidance, debug support and circuit optimization to boost engineering productivity while meeting strict manufacturability requirements. Together, Siemens and NVIDIA said that these capabilities will advance AI-native engines for design, verification, manufacturability and digital-twin approaches to shorten design cycles, improve yield and deliver more reliable outcomes.

Designing the next generation of AI factories

Siemens and NVIDIA also said at CES that they will jointly develop a repeatable blueprint for next-generation AI factories - accelerating the industrial AI revolution and providing the high-performance foundation for their AI-accelerated industrial portfolios.

The companies said that this blueprint will balance the next-generation high-density computing demands for power, cooling and automation while ensuring technologies are well positioned for both speed and efficiency - optimizing the full lifecycle, from planning and design to deployment and operations.

The organizations said that this combined effort bridges NVIDIA’s AI platform roadmap, AI infrastructure expertise, partner ecosystem and the accelerated power of NVIDIA Omniverse library-based simulation with Siemens’ strengths in power infrastructure, electrification, grid integration, automation and digital twins.

Together, the companies aim to accelerate deployment, increase energy efficiency and improve resilience for industrial-scale AI infrastructure worldwide.

 

Latest in GPU

Latest in Artificial Intelligence

Article Topics

Artificial Intelligence   Deep Learning   Machine Vision   Machine Learning   Software   Simulation   News   Press Release   Digital Twin   GPU   NVIDIA   Semiconductor   Siemens   Sustainability   Test  

All topics

Editors' Picks