Hannover Messe knocked on to 2021

Premium Content

02 April 2020

Hannover Messe hm_logo_4c INDEX

The Hannover Messe industrial manufacturing, automation and logistics exhibition, due to take place this April and then rescheduled for July, has been postponed for a second time.

This vast German show was rescheduled last month from April to mid-July but the ongoing Coronavirus Covid-19 pandemic has precipitated another postponement. The 5,500-exhibitor, 200,000-attendee event will now run next year, from 12 to 16 April 2021.

Jochen Köckler, chairman of the Board of Management, Deutsche Messe, said, “Given the dynamic development around Covid-19 and the extensive restrictions on public and economic life, Hannover Messe cannot take place this year. Our exhibitors, partners and our entire team did everything they could to make it happen but today we have to accept that in 2020 it will not be possible to host the world’s most important industrial event.”

It will be the first no-show in the event’s 73-year history. A digital information and networking platform is being developed. The organiser explained, “It will allow exhibitors and visitors to exchange information about upcoming economic policy challenges and technological solutions. Live streams will transport interactive expert interviews, panel discussions and best-case presentations all over the world. The online exhibitor and product search is also being enhanced, for example, with a function that enables visitors and exhibitors to contact each other directly.”

 

First expert speaker announced for power transition webinar
Moog Construction’s Dr Nate Keller to join panel for February 17 event
Is total cost of ownership now the real measure of equipment value?
As sustainability pressures, technology and rising operating costs reshape construction economics, contractors are looking beyond purchase price to understand what machines truly cost over their lifetime
How Donaldson is putting the seal on innovative filtration
When you’re working with machinery, uptime is money – so why allow downtime on a jobsite to be triggered by something as unglamorous as an air filter?