How technologies are changing in global supply chains
How technologies are changing in global supply chains
Industrial trade fairs are no longer just places to discover new machinery or sign commercial agreements: they are becoming barometers of the future.
And by observing them closely, you can understand far more about the factory of tomorrow than by simply browsing reports or financial charts.
From Automation to Industrial Self-Awareness
Where are we heading?
Toward an industry that “thinks” both inside and outside the factory.
Machines capable not only of moving, bending, or assembling, but also of learning: adaptive automation, intelligent sensors, algorithms that anticipate failures before they happen.
The factory never stops; maintenance becomes an invisible continuum. But a question arises: are we over-technologizing production before building a shared industrial ethic around the use of intelligent machines?
Energy: the new common thread of global manufacturing
Production is no longer just about “what” and “how,” but also “with what.”
Energy has become the strategic variable of global industry. Companies are looking to green hydrogen as the fuel of the future, while others are testing corporate microgrids powered by renewables and storage systems.
Yes, we can envision energy self-sufficient industries—but the real challenge is this: will green energy truly become democratic, or remain a privilege for high-margin sectors?
Cybersecurity and OT/IT: two worlds that can no longer ignore each other
The convergence between Operational Technology (OT) and Information Technology (IT) is not just technical—it’s a forced marriage.
Production control, digital sales, connected supply chains.
But every access point is a potential vulnerability. Today, a ransomware attack can shut down a steel plant, not just steal data.
The era of zero trust architecture has begun: trust nothing—not even your own machines.
Trade Fairs: not showcases, but platforms for shared vision
What’s interesting is that trade fairs are no longer just “parades of booths.” They have become spaces where the market discusses meaning, vision, and industrial responsibility.
People attending tech fairs today are not just looking for products, but for ideas on how to build businesses that are more global, interoperable, and less predatory.
Sustainability: between greenwashing and real business models
A fundamental question lingers across exhibition halls: is sustainability a product line, or a deep ethical and systemic transformation?
Everyone talks about carbon neutrality, but few are willing to bear the cost of reshaping processes and supply chains. The solutions exist—bio-based materials, hydrogen, advanced recycling—but real industrial commitment is needed.
The fear? That sustainability becomes what Industry 4.0 has been for many: a compelling presentation claim, with limited concrete action.
Two questions we should be asking ourselves
- Are we building technologies to improve quality of life, or simply to increase productivity?
- Is the digital revolution truly inclusive for SMEs and smaller supply chains, or does it risk widening an already evident gap?