Exhibitions / Congresses

LogiMAT

Germany, Stuttgart - 8th – 10th February, 2011
LogiMAT, the International Trade Fair for Distribution,
Materials Handling and Information Flow, sets new standards as the biggest annual intralogistics exhibition in Europe.

International exhibitors and decision-makers from industry, trade and the service sector will be coming together at the new exhibition centre
at Stuttgart Airport to find new business partners. The focus will be on innovative products, solutions and systems for procurement, warehouse, production and distribution logistics.

Raeder Vogel report that they will exhibit as usual. In the past years, LogiMAT has become more and more important in central Europe, and there are visitors from Austria, Poland, the Czech Republic, Belgium, the Netherlands, France and other countries and regions.
Date(s)
8th – 10th February, 2011
Venue
New Stuttgart Trade Fair Centre
Movers & Shakers
Steven Ballerini Steven Ballerini
Chief executive officer, Australian Supply Chain & Logistics Association (ASCLA)
Engineering policy lead, Logistics UK
Regional manager - Eastern Canada, Associated Equipment Distributors
Vice president - IT & EP OEM parts, Big Joe Forklifts

PREMIUM business

Lift Technologies Inc.
Global leader - manufactures masts, carriages, sideshifters & fork positioners
Latest job alerts …
Dayton, OH, United States
Columbus, United States
New York Staten Island, United States
Oxford Ct, United States
Editorial calendar - planned features
CONSTRUCTION FORKLIFTS
HANDLING GOODS IN THE COLD
LOADING/UNLOADING FREIGHT
BROWNFIELD AUTOMATION
FORKLIFT ATTACHMENTS
BATTERY AFFORDABILITY AND LIFETIME
FORKLIFT SAFETY
Ice 24INCH-AUTO-SCRUBBER
Morgantown, Pennsylvania, United States
Used - Sale
USD6,396
UN Forklift FD40T
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New - Sale
Global Industry News
edition #1257 - 20 November 2025
In this week’s Forkliftaction News , Toyota Industries Corporation confirms it has settled a class-action lawsuit in the US which centred around its 2023 emissions cheating scandal. Find out how much the class-action cost it... Continue reading
Fact of the week
In 1898, author Morgan Robertson wrote a novel called 'Futility', which described an "unsinkable" ship named the Titan that sank after hitting an iceberg. Fourteen years later, the Titanic sank in a strikingly similar fashion.