LIGNA 21: support despite pandemic

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Preparations for LIGNA '21 are already in full swing. The world's top international wood-industry trade show is enjoying strong industry support despite the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic. The scheduled opening day is a good eight months away, but demand for exhibition space is already strong.

Hannover. Preparations for LIGNA '21 are already in full swing. The world's top international wood-industry trade show is enjoying strong industry support despite the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic. The scheduled opening day is a good eight months away, but demand for exhibition space is already strong. "The event will once again fill ten halls as well as the open-air site booked. All the big industry players are on board. It seems that after many weeks of social distancing, lockdowns, online-only events and video conferencing from home, the industry is really looking forward to meeting up face-to-face," said Christian Pfeiffer, Deutsche Messe's Global Director LIGNA & Woodworking Shows. "Businesses in the wood industry are keen to resume normal production and sales. They want to be able to advise and inform their customers in person. So, we're doing everything we can to provide a safe and effective marketplace where the wood industry can meet, showcase new products and developments, and get business moving again."

LIGNA is the flagship fair of the global wood industry and serves as a marketplace for woodworking and wood processing plants, machinery and tools as well as a platform for exploring and debating hot topics set to shape the future of the industry. At the upcoming show, the following three topics will feature prominently: Woodworking Transformation, Prefab Building Processes and Green Material Processing. Exhibitors will be highlighting these topics at their stands, and they will also be featured across various forums and special displays.

"LIGNA will present the pioneering developments and visionary ideas that will be shaping wood-industry production and business processes just a few years from now," remarked Dr. Bernhard Dirr, director of the German Engineering Federation (VDMA). "LIGNA is our window onto the future, and that's more important than ever given the COVID-19 pandemic. If we manage to showcase our industry in a way that people can physically explore, experience and engage with, then I think we can call LIGNA 2021 a success, regardless of the visitor and exhibitor turnout," Dirr said.

"Obviously, we all hope that the worst of the pandemic will be over by May," Pfeiffer commented, "but it's impossible to say when case numbers might start to drop off or when a vaccine might become available. So we have to be realistic. The global travel restrictions alone suggest that we are will have fewer international visitors than at LIGNA 2019. The virus is likely to be with us for some time to come, so we need to find new ways of enabling businesses to engage with their markets. We need LIGNA '21."

Deutsche Messe's LIGNA team is currently developing a digital participation option that will be offered alongside the show's trusted in-person format. It will make the show available to exhibitors and visitors from key markets who may be unable to travel to Hannover.

Learn more at www.ligna.de

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