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Turing Raises USD 120M Series C from ENEOS, Isuzu, and SoftBank Vision Fund 2 for Japanese Autonomous Fleet AI

Tokyo-based Turing, building autonomous driving AI for Japanese logistics and commercial fleets, raises USD 120 million Series C from ENEOS, Isuzu, and SoftBank Vision Fund 2 — the largest Japanese autonomous vehicle AI funding round of 2026.

AE By AIMenta Editorial Team ·
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Tokyo-based Turing, building autonomous driving AI for Japanese logistics and commercial fleets, raises USD 120 million Series C from ENEOS, Isuzu, and SoftBank Vision Fund 2 — the largest Japanese autonomous vehicle AI funding round of 2026.

Tokyo-based Turing has raised USD 120 million in a Series C funding round led by ENEOS Holdings and Isuzu Motors, with SoftBank Vision Fund 2 as co-investor — the largest Japanese autonomous vehicle AI funding round of 2026 and a signal of accelerating corporate investment in domestic autonomous logistics technology.

Turing's technology focus is specifically Japanese logistics and commercial fleet automation rather than passenger vehicle robotaxi applications: highway platooning for long-haul Isuzu trucking routes between Tokyo and Osaka, yard automation at ENEOS petroleum distribution terminals, and last-mile delivery vehicle automation for urban Japanese logistics. Japan's demographic reality — an aging truck driver workforce with no domestic pipeline to replace retirements — creates a structural demand for automated logistics AI that makes Japan a uniquely commercially urgent market for autonomous vehicle technology, as opposed to US and Chinese markets where the primary driver is cost reduction.

For APAC AI infrastructure and enterprise technology leaders, Turing's Series C reflects two important signals about APAC autonomous vehicle AI investment patterns in 2026: first, that Japanese corporate strategic investors (ENEOS, Isuzu) are directly funding autonomous AI companies as a supply chain risk hedge rather than waiting for the technology to mature through consumer market development; and second, that vertical-specific autonomous AI (logistics-first, not all-purpose robotaxi) is attracting larger funding rounds than horizontal autonomy companies in APAC, as investors prefer addressable market clarity over general-purpose autonomy timelines.

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