Caterpillar and NVIDIA Partner on AI-Powered Heavy Equipment Revolution

Caterpillar Inc. has announced a comprehensive push into artificial intelligence and autonomous operations, unveiling the Cat AI Assistant and an expanded partnership with NVIDIA at CES 2026 in Las Vegas.

The Cat AI Assistant represents a significant advancement in industrial AI, unifying Caterpillar’s digital applications and data platform into a conversational interface. Built on the company’s Helios data platform, which manages over 16 petabytes of data, the assistant provides personalized insights for fleet managers, technicians, and machine operators across office and jobsite environments.

“Caterpillar’s strong digital foundation is helping us move fast and deploy new AI capabilities to help our customers succeed,” said Ogi Redzic, Caterpillar Chief Digital Officer. The assistant uses NVIDIA Riva speech models and will launch for off-board applications in the first quarter of 2026, with in-cab features currently in final validation stages.

The expanded NVIDIA collaboration extends across Caterpillar’s operations, from equipment to manufacturing. Machines will incorporate NVIDIA’s Jetson Thor platform for real-time AI inference, enabling autonomous operations and intelligent operator assistance. Features include real-time coaching, productivity recommendations, and safety alerts that process sensor data at the edge.

“For a century, Caterpillar has built the industrial machines that shaped the world,” said Jensen Huang, NVIDIA’s founder and CEO. “In the age of AI, NVIDIA and Caterpillar are partnering across the full spectrum.”

Caterpillar is leveraging its NVIDIA AI Factory to transform manufacturing and supply chain operations, building digital twins of factories on NVIDIA Omniverse and OpenUSD platforms. These virtual replicas allow teams to design and optimize production processes before physical implementation.

The company previewed five autonomous construction machines at CES, extending its three decades of autonomous mining experience to everyday construction sites. CEO Joe Creed emphasized that AI is moving beyond data centers to reshape physical industries, from mining critical minerals for semiconductors to constructing infrastructure.

Complementing the technology investments, Caterpillar pledged $25 million over five years for a global innovation prize focused on workforce education. The initiative will identify and scale solutions to help workers develop skills for increasingly digital and autonomous work environments.

With $30 billion invested in research and development over the past two decades, Caterpillar plans to increase digital and technology investment by 2.5 times through 2030, positioning the company at the intersection of heavy industry and artificial intelligence.

Go to Source