The Ford Motor manufacturing plant in Valencia, Spain, has a new delivery employee — an autonomous robot named "Survival."

The self-driving robot uses lidar (light detection and ranging) technology to visualize its surroundings and deliver spare parts to where they're needed in the facility. It was manufactured by Ford engineers and is the first of its kind to be used at one of the company's European plants.

Ford said Survival gives employees more time to undertake more complex tasks.

"When it first started you could see employees thinking they were in some kind of sci-fi movie, stopping and staring at it as it went by," Eduardo García Magraner, manufacturing manager at the Valencia factory, said in a statement. "Now they just get on with their jobs knowing the robot is smart enough to work around them."

The robot made its debut as workers around the world become increasingly worried their jobs will one day be stolen by technology.

Nearly half of the world's jobs face some risk of being automated, according to research by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. A Brookings Institution report warns that a quarter of Americans are at high risk of losing their jobs to automation.

Workers in food services, manufacturing, administrative support, farming, transportation and construction have the greatest likelihood of being replaced by robots.

In 2018, a record number of robots were put to work in North America. According to the Robotic Industries Association, 35,880 robots were shipped to the U.S., Canada and Mexico last year, with 53% going to the automotive industry.

Ford said workers at the Valencia plant don't need to fear Survival taking their job.

The company said delivering spare parts to different areas of the plant is "time consuming and relatively mundane," adding that Survival saves up to 40 working hours for employees and does not replace anyone on the job.