15 Jun 2026
by Hossein Farid

The Missing Piece: Why Assurance is the Key to Responsible Robotics Adoption at Scale

The UK ranks first in the world for robotics research quality [1 ]. We have world-class universities, a growing ecosystem of innovative companies, and genuine expertise in AI, surgical robotics, autonomous inspection, and more. And yet we sit 19th globally for industrial robot density [2]. Around 20,000 of our 27,000 manufacturing SMEs have never deployed a single robot [3].

This is what researchers and industry bodies have come to call the UK's robotics paradox, and it is one I recognise deeply, both from my academic work in robotics and from industry experience.

The policy conversation tends to frame this as a problem of awareness, funding, or regulation. These matter. But there is a more fundamental issue that rarely gets named directly: we do not yet have the assurance frameworks that give organisations the confidence to deploy robotics responsibly and at scale.

The technology is not the problem

Recent research into agricultural robotics adoption made this point sharply [4]. The solutions they need, vision-based crop monitoring, automated soil sampling, robotic sorting and grading, already exist and are commercially available. The problem is that these solutions are being pushed at farmers rather than developed with them [4], and the support infrastructure around adoption is not built around how farming businesses make investment decisions.

This pattern repeats across every sector I have worked in. The technology is rarely the bottleneck. The questions organisations face are different: How do I know this system will deliver the value it promises in my specific environment?

How does it integrate with my existing infrastructure, workflows, and data systems? What happens when it fails, and who is accountable? Does deploying this system create new risks, operational, ethical, legal, that I am not currently equipped to manage?

These are not technical questions. They are assurance questions. And right now, there is no systematic, independent framework for answering them.

What assurance means

When people hear the word assurance in a robotics context, they tend to think of safety certification. That framing is far too narrow, and it misses most of what matters.

Value assurance addresses whether the system will deliver the outcomes the organisation is trying to achieve. A robot that performs well in a controlled demonstration environment may not perform the same way when integrated into a live operation with all its variability, edge cases, and competing demands. Assurance here means establishing clear metrics for success before deployment, testing against realistic operational conditions, and creating mechanisms to verify that value is being delivered on an ongoing basis, not just at go-live.

Integration assurance addresses how the robotic system interacts with everything around it: existing technology infrastructure, data pipelines, regulatory requirements, supply chains, and human workflows. A robot sits within an ecosystem, and the risks and value created by its deployment are largely determined by the quality of that integration. Poor integration is one of the most frequently cited barriers to adoption [3].

Risk assurance goes beyond functional safety to encompass operational risk, cybersecurity, liability, supply chain resilience, and the longer-term strategic risks of technology lock-in or over-dependence on imported components. The reliance of UK robotics on hardware imported primarily from Asia has been identified as a structural supply chain vulnerability [3].

Ethical and social assurance is the dimension most often treated as an afterthought and least often built into deployment practice. It encompasses questions about workforce impact, are the people working alongside these systems properly trained, informed, and genuinely part of the transition, or is

automation happening to them rather than with them [5]?

None of these four dimensions can be addressed by a safety certificate. All of them are prerequisites for deployment that earns and maintains public trust.

Why this matters for the UK specifically

The UK's challenge is not a shortage of ambition. It is a shortage of the infrastructure that translates ambition into responsible, sustainable adoption. Regulatory clarity is welcome, but it is not the same as assurance and conflating the two leaves a significant gap. Policymakers have a role, but a focused one: improving pathways from innovation to deployment and ensuring access to independent assurance for those navigating complexity.

For SMEs in particular, this gap is acute. These organisations do not have dedicated technology teams capable of evaluating competing robotics solutions, assessing integration risk, or validating vendor claims. They need trusted, independent guidance that is built around their operational reality, not a sales pitch dressed up as advice.

For larger organisations, the gap is significant. Strategically deploying public procurement to accelerate robotics adoption [3] requires frameworks that evaluate solutions on dimensions beyond price and specification.

The opportunity

This is also, clearly, a significant commercial opportunity. Organisations that can provide credible, independent assurance services across the robotics adoption journey, from pre-deployment evaluation through integration support to ongoing performance verification, are positioned at the intersection of every major trend driving robotics growth. At Qualitest, this is precisely the space we are developing. Our experience in quality engineering and assurance gives us a foundation that is directly applicable to the challenges of responsible robotics deployment, and we are building the domain expertise and methodological rigour to make that case compellingly.

But I want to be clear that this is not primarily an argument about commercial positioning. It is an argument about what the UK needs to do to turn its genuine research and innovation strengths into sustained economic leadership in robotics.

 

The countries and companies that will win in this space will not simply be those with the best technology. They will be those that have built the trust infrastructure to deploy it at scale, across diverse sectors and environments, in ways that deliver demonstrable value and manage risk responsibly. That trust infrastructure does not yet exist in any systematic form. Building it is the missing piece.

The UK has all the ingredients for global robotics leadership. What it needs now is the framework that turns great technology into responsible, scalable adoption, not as an aspiration, but as a structured, evidence-based practice. That is the conversation our sector needs to have, and the work I am committed to advancing.

Author

Hossein Farid

Hossein Farid

Director of Robotics and Physical AI, Qualitest Group


References

  1. Government Office for Science, Rapid Technology Assessment: Robotics (March 2025). Available at: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/rapid-technology  -assessment-robotics/rta-robotics
  2. International Federation of Robotics, World Robotics 2025 Report (September 2025). Available at: https://ifr.org/ifr-press-releases/news/global-robot-demand-in-factories-doubles-over-10-years
  3. techUK, Seizing the Robotics Opportunity: How the UK can build, deploy, scale and export the next wave of robotics (April 2026). Available at: https://www.techuk.org
  4. Battison, N., The National Robotarium, "The problem with Scottish agritech isn't the technology", originally published in The Scottish Farmer (March 2026). Available at: https://thenationalrobotarium.com/opinion-the-problem-with-scottish-agritech-isnt-the-technology  /
  5. Institute for the Future of Work, "A People Challenge, Not a Tech One" — First Findings on Workplace AI from CIPD-backed Case Studies (April 2026). Available at: https://www.ifow.org/news-articles/a-people-challenge-not-a-tech-one---findings-on-workplace-ai-from-our-cipd-backed-case-studies

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Meet the team 

Sue Daley OBE

Sue Daley OBE

Director, Technology and Innovation

Rory Daniels

Rory Daniels

Head of Emerging Technology and Innovation, techUK

Tess Buckley

Tess Buckley

Senior Programme Manager in Digital Ethics and AI Safety, techUK

Usman Ikhlaq

Usman Ikhlaq

Programme Manager - Artificial Intelligence, techUK

Elis Thomas

Elis Thomas

Programme Manager, Tech and Innovation, techUK

Sara Duodu  ​​​​

Sara Duodu ​​​​

Programme Manager ‑ Quantum and Digital Twins, techUK

Ella Shuter

Ella Shuter

Junior Programme Manager, Emerging Technologies, techUK

Luke Lightowler

Luke Lightowler

Junior Programme Manager - Emerging Technologies & Robotics, techUK

 

 

 

 

Authors

Hossein Farid

Hossein Farid

Director of Robotics and Physical AI, Qualitest Group

Hossein Farid is Director of Robotics and Physical AI at Qualitest Group, where he leads the development of assurance frameworks for robotic and physical AI systems. With over 20 years of experience across academia and industry, he has worked extensively in robotics, AI, and large-scale system transformation within the UK’s high-tech sector. Hossein holds a PhD in a related field and has contributed to advancing the safe and responsible adoption of robotics through work spanning technical leadership, industry collaboration, and engagement with regulators and partners.