
Meet Asia's 30 Under 30 Entrepreneurs Making Robots And Rockets
Yi Gang was a chemistry student at the China University of Mining and Technology when he realized a friend was struggling to afford a prosthetic hand. Determined to help, he researched how to make one himself, and with money raised from a teacher and part-time jobs, he completed a robotics prototype his junior year. Impressed, the university gave Yi access to a lab room and a robotic engineering tutor to study the subject further. After graduating in 2020, Yi launched Shanghai-based Ti5 Robot Technology, which has since developed five robot models. They include a couple of two-legged humanoids powered by its AI software, which can navigate different environments and respond to verbal commands.
Yi Gang is one of the innovators on this year's Forbes 30 Under 30 Asia: Industry, Manufacturing & Energy list who are creating pioneering products.
Deliveries of Ti5 Robot Technology's 1.7-meter-tall humanoids will start in June in China and the U.S. 'The commercialization of humanoid robots is happening very fast,' Yi says. 'And we are at the forefront of it.'
Yi declined to name customers of his humanoids, which cost between 200,000 yuan and 800,000 yuan ($27,000 and $110,000). The price varies, he says, depending on whether the robots will be used for simpler jobs, such as shaking hands or interacting with customers in service centers, or for complex customized tasks like running checks on factory lines. Ti5 has raised almost 200 million yuan from investors, including Chinese VC Plum Ventures and Matrix Partners China. The company also sells a bionic hand and robotics parts to industrial manufacturers, including car makers.
Humanoid robots are especially seeing an uptick in demand in China where the government has announced plans to channel hundreds of billions of dollars in funding to cutting edge industries including robotics and AI.
Yue Xi, cofounder of Robotera
Supplied photo
Also riding this trend is Xi Yue who cofounded Beijing-based humanoid robot maker Robotera with Tsinghua University assistant professor Chen Jianyu (over 30). Their 1.7-meter robot Star1 can walk and run, has climbed the Great Wall and taken part in a marathon. Robotera has raised about 400 million yuan ($54 million) in funding from investors that include IMO Ventures and Vision Plus Capital. In March, the company signed an agreement with Chinese home appliance giant Haier to jointly develop robots to assist with household chores.
30 Under 30 Asia listees this year are also making strides in spacetech–especially in India where Tanveer Ahmed, Rahul Rawat and Anirudh Sharma cofounded Digantara, which develops tools for commercial space companies and government agencies to monitor potential safety risks in orbit, such as satellites and debris. Sharma says Digantara is building the equivalent of Google Maps for space. The company's funding includes a $12 million series A round completed last February from investors including Aditya Birla Ventures, Peak XV Partners and Kalaari Capital.
Jainul Abedin, founder of Abyom SpaceTech and Defence
Supplied photo
Their compatriot Jainul Abedin founded Abyom SpaceTech and Defence in 2020. The company is developing reusable rocket launch technologies for commercial use and academic research. Abedin says the first launch is scheduled for 2027. Last November, the company raised $2.5 million in seed funding from Scope Ventures.
Reusable rocket launch technologies have also attracted the attention of Manu J. Nair and Prashant Sharma who cofounded Bangalore-based space startup Ethereal Exploration Guild in 2022 with Shubhayu Sardar (over 30). The company is developing fully reusable launch vehicles, targeting the so-called medium-lift segment, which can lift between 2,000 and 20,000 kilograms by NASA classification. EtherealX's initial product is called Razor Crest Mk-1, which can carry 25 tons to low Earth orbit. Last year, the company raised $5 million in seed funding from investors including Bluehill Capital and YourNest.
Elsewhere in the region, young entrepreneurs are exploring new and environmentally friendly ways to manufacture industrial and consumer goods.
In New Zealand, college friends William Murrell and Ben Scales cofounded KiwiFibre in 2021. The Christchurch-based company has developed technologies to turn the country's indigenous harakeke plant into materials that can serve as a sustainable alternative to carbon fiber and fiberglass. KiwiFibre has raised almost NZ$5 million ($2.9 million) in funding from investors including Icehouse Ventures and Phase One Ventures. The company says its products have already been used to make snowboards and race cars.
William Murrell and Ben Scales, cofounders of KiwiFibre
Supplied photo
In neighboring Australia, Connor Balfany's The Leaf Protein Co. has developed technologies to extract protein from leaf tissues in the form of an edible powder, which can be mixed in drinks or used to make diet supplements. Last June, the Melbourne-based company raised A$850,000 ($540,000) in pre-seed funding from investors including LaunchVic and Loyal VC.
In China, Su Rui and Xue Ruixuan cofounded SynMetabio to make synthetic materials, particularly synthetic leather. Established in 2021, their Shanghai-based company uses gene editing and fermenting technologies to process base materials such as corn cobs and straw into synthetic leather. The company has raised 50 million yuan ($7 million) in funding from investors including K2VC and MiraclePlus.
Read our complete Industry, Manufacturing & Energy list here – and be sure to check out our full Forbes 30 Under 30 Asia 2025 coverage here.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
40 minutes ago
- Yahoo
China to send vice premier He Lifeng to Britain for US trade talks
SHANGHAI (Reuters) -China's foreign ministry said on Saturday that Chinese vice premier He Lifeng will visit the United Kingdom between June 8 and June 13. The first meeting of the China-U.S. economic and trade consultation mechanism will be held with the United States during this visit, the ministry said. He led the Chinese side in the first round of trade talks in May. President Donald Trump said on Friday that U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Trade Representative Jamieson Greer will represent Washington in the talks.


UPI
an hour ago
- UPI
China to fast-track applications for rare-earth minerals to US, EU
A rare earth mine is in Ganxian county in central China's Jiangxi province. Photo by EPA-ESE June 7 (UPI) -- China has agreed to fast-track approvals for the shipment of rare earth minerals to the United States and some European Union nations. U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping spoke Thursday about easing trade tensions. On Saturday, China's Minister Seceary Wang Wentao said his nation is "willing to establish a green channel for qualified applications to speed up approval." Details weren't given, including the speed of the process and which EU nations are included. China controls 90% of the global processing of rare earth minerals. Major deposits also are found in the United States, Australia and Russia. Smaller amounts are in Canada, India, South Africa and Southeast Asia. Rare earth minerals are in the Earth's crust, making them difficult to extract. They include lanthanide, scandium and yttrium, all on the Periodic Table of Elements. Some major minerals that contain rare earth elements are bastnasite, monazite, loparite and laterite clays. The first rare-earth mineral was discovered in 1787 -- gadolinite, a black mineral composed of cerium, yttrium, iron, silicon and other elements. U.S. needs rare earth minerals The minerals are critical to American industries and defense, including use in cars and fighter jets. Batteries contain the minerals Trump posted on Truth Social on Thursday "there should no longer be any questions respecting the complexity of rare Earth products." On April 29, the United States and Ukraine created a Reconstruction Investment Fund that includes rare earth mineral rights in the European nation. Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky were originally set to sign the minerals deal on Feb. 28, but the plan was scrapped after a tense exchange between them in the Oval Office in which Trump accused him of "gambling with World War III." The United States wants access to more than 20 raw materials in Ukraine, including some non-minerals, such as oil and natural gas, as well as titanium, lithium, graphite and manganese. The Chinese commerce ministry confirmed some applications have been approved without specifying industries covered. Some Chinese suppliers have recently received six-month export licenses, the American Chamber of Commerce in China said Friday, but it noted that there is a backlog of license applications. In a survey of member companies conducted by the American Chamber of Commerce in China late week, 75% say their stock would run out within three months, CNN reported. Jens Eskelund, the chamber president, said member companies were "still struggling" with the situation. "I hadn't realized just how important this rare earth card was before. Now the U.S. side is clearly anxious and eager to resolve this issue," he said a video on Thursday. "But of course, we'll link this issue to others -- the U.S. is restricting China on chips and jet engines, then China certainly has every reason to make use of this card. "As for whether China will change its rare earth export control policy, that probably still needs to be negotiated in more detail," Jin added. Trump said Xi and himself "straightened out" some points related to rare earth magnets, calling it "very complex stuff." The U.S. federal government said China had reneged on its promise made in Geneva on May 12. Delegations from Beijing and Washington plan to meet in Great Britain on Monday for trade negotiations. At the height of tariff war, China had imposed export restrictions on some minerals on April 4. Trump two days planned a 120% "reciprocal" tax on top of 25% levy on Chinese goods. But one week later it paused the bigger tariffs, including on other countries for 90 days. European nations' needs China's commerce ministry pledged to address the EU's concerns and establish a "green channel" for eligible applications to expedite approvals. He went to Brussels, Belgium, earlier this week and met with European Union's trade commissioner, Maros Sefcovic. It's a problem for China and the EU. Sefcovic said the pause was slowing deliveries for manufacturers of a wide range of items from cars to washing machines. Wang urged the EU to "take effective measures to facilitate, safeguard and promote compliant trade of high-tech products to China." On Friday, the European Chamber, a Beijing lobby group, warned progress had "not been sufficient" to prevent severe supply chain disruptions for many companies.


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
The ultimate loser of Trump and Musk's bloody battle royale could be the nation
Godzilla vs King Kong. Ali vs Frazier. Yankees vs. Red Sox. Trump vs. Musk is bigger than all of them because — unlike the first match — this one is real. And unlike the other two, it has real-world consequences. The future of the republic — not to mention the future of Tesla, SpaceX and Musk's other cutting-edge tech companies — could be at stake, depending on how bad it all gets. Of course, with this pair, they could make up while this column is at the printer. Musk is known to do 180s in business like most people breathe, and he seems open (at least for now) to rapprochement. That's why, after tanking during early rounds of the fight, Tesla shares spiked on Friday. Trump, meanwhile, can be forgiving when he sees an opportunity. Remember how he mocked 'Little Marco,' who after a MAGA-esque transformation is now Secretary of State Marco Rubio. Trump wanted to ban TikTok but as I was first to report, he's extending its life in the US. He came to believe that even if it is Chinese spyware, it helped him win a second term. But there's a better case that the Trump-Musk feud will linger. These men maintain some of the biggest egos on the planet; Musk actually thinks he's the reason Trump got elected since Elon owns X (formerly Twitter), which became a MAGA megaphone. If you know Trump like I do, someone taking credit for his success is a third rail. Plus, Musk isn't a natural convert to MAGA. These dudes bonded because Musk, a former Democrat, believed his party lost its mind on woke. His EV maker Tesla, a darling of the environmental movement, has a big operation in China, the main target of Trump's trade war. Musk called Peter Navarro, Trump's lead trade warrior, 'Peter Retarrdo' because Elon's no fan of tariffs. For his part, Trump is no budget hawk. It's telling that this fight started with Musk's critique that the president's 'big, beautiful bill' spends too much money. It quickly exposed other fissures lurking beneath the surface, according to my sources, and now it has gotten messy. No way to treat a pal Trump is teeing up killing all of Musk's lucrative government contracting after Musk outrageously — and foolishly — claimed the president is holding back the Jeffrey Epstein files because Trump's in the docs in some nefarious way. Not a way to treat a friend, particularly a powerful one. All of which gets me to laying odds on the winner if this feud keeps going. I say Trump is the heavy favorite. Musk has no political base, even if he splinters and begins spending his billions on Dems. Yes, some lefties are relishing the battle, but Musk will never be acceptable to most Democrats for the unforgivable sin of aiding Trump, then via DOGE cutting all that government lefty spending. Charlie Gasparino has his finger on the pulse of where business, politics and finance meet Sign up to receive On The Money by Charlie Gasparino in your inbox every Thursday. Thanks for signing up! Enter your email address Please provide a valid email address. By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Never miss a story. Check out more newsletters Meanwhile, Musk poses little threat to MAGA. He's not a natural politician — he's not even comfortable in his own skin. He controls X and has a huge following, but Trump has his own following and social media platform that attracts as much media attention. And Trump can hit him where it hurts — his pocketbook. Musk is the world's richest man, but mostly on paper. It could diminish fast given how much of it is built on government work. Recall Musk smoking a joint on Joe Rogan, which is a no-no when you do defense contracting as SpaceX does. I reported how it sparked scrutiny by the feds that went nowhere. Maybe now it goes somewhere. Musk's accounting at Tesla has drawn regulatory attention in the past; it now might get some more. The company just had a lousy quarter as its lefty EV-buying base went somewhere else. Shares have recovered somewhat but remain under pressure. They fell as much as 16% when the feud went defcon. Trump could go after other parts of the Musk empire. The president could throttle SpaceX's government contracts, using the weed issue as an excuse to re-examine the relationship. Maybe more of those go by the wayside along with all his other government contracts. Musk is obviously miffed that Trump's tax bill didn't cut enough fat, but what might have really stoked his anger is that it did take aim at various green-tax credits that Tesla has feasted upon. Musk's recklessness in his attacks underscores one of his weaknesses as a CEO; he once said he had a buyer to take it private at a premium but no one emerged. And you wonder why the Epstein barb shouldn't be taken seriously. The smarter move Yes, Trump has a lot of levers to pull to get at what makes Musk so powerful. But here's why he shouldn't: For all of Musk's flaws, he's smart and has his finger on the pulse of the emerging economy. Tesla's tech is first-rate. SpaceX is transformational, and serves a significant national security function. Musk is rich and can continue to elect Republicans to keep Trump from being impeached and derailing what is really working in his second term, such as his war on woke, closing the border and, when this tariff stuff subsidies, tax cuts to grow the economy. And they did make beautiful music together exposing stuff with DOGE. Someone please call a timeout.