Japan AI Consortium Elects Subcommittee to Determine When to Elect Subcommittees
TOKYO—Japan's government announced Tuesday it would commit up to $6.16 billion over five years to a nine-company consortium — led by SoftBank Corp., Honda Motor, NEC, and Sony — to develop a domestic AI foundation model by 2027, in what officials called the country's largest sovereign-AI initiative and what consortium members unanimously agreed to call a historic alignment.
The model, intended to close Japan's gap with American and Chinese AI leaders, will draw on proprietary corporate data contributed by all nine members, pending final negotiations on data-sharing terms, confidentiality protocols, contribution weighting, and whether automotive sensor logs qualify as uniquely Japanese.
At formation, the consortium established a Steering Committee, an Executive Advisory Board, a Technical Coordination Panel, and a Working Subgroup on Subgroup Formation, which is expected to recommend what additional subgroups are required before model development can formally begin. The subgroup's first meeting is scheduled for October.
The foundation model's target capabilities include physical AI trained on Japanese industrial data and, per one consortium document, "tasks consistent with the unique competitive strengths of Japanese enterprise" — a formulation analysts interpreted as scheduling, consensus documentation, and the formal acknowledgment of prior communications.
Japan's economy minister called the initiative a turning point, observing that the United States and China launched their own foundation model programs while Japan's nine consortium members were still in preliminary discussions with each other's legal departments.
"This consortium represents an unprecedented alignment of Japanese industry behind a shared national purpose," a SoftBank spokesperson said. "The purpose will be finalized in Q1 2027."