Report this forum post

I have had the opportunity to visit a small number of materials handling trade shows during the past years. The biggest ones I visited were CeMAT in Hannover-2002 and IMHX in Birmingham/UK-2004. They were both very well organised and of international caliber. I was wondering if any one could advice me on trade shows of the same international significance in the Americas, Asia or anywhere else? -
  • Posted 17 May 2004 15:09
  • Modified 11 Jun 2004 11:26 by poster
  • By Karina_H
  • joined 17 May'04 - 1 message
  • Queensland, Australia

This is ONLY to be used to report flooding, spam, advertising and problematic (harassing, abusive or crude) posts.

Indicates mandatory field
Fact of the week
The two internal cavities in our nose called nostrils function as separate organs. Each nostril has its own set of turbinates and olfactory receptors. The two independent organs work together through a mechanism called the nasal cycle, where one nostril is dominant for air intake while the other rests and is better at detecting scents.
Upcoming industry events …
March 3-7, 2026 - Las Vegas, NV, United States
January 28-30, 2026 - Bangkok, Thailand
31 March 2026 - Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Movers & Shakers
James Brown James Brown
Chief operating officer, Bulldog Battery Corporation
Commercial excellence roll-out manager, TVH Parts
President EPG Americas, Ehrhardt Partner Group (EPG)
CEO, Duravant
Upcoming industry events …
March 3-7, 2026 - Las Vegas, NV, United States
January 28-30, 2026 - Bangkok, Thailand
31 March 2026 - Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Global Industry News
edition #1261 - 18 December 2025
In this week’s Forkliftaction News , we report on an activist investment firm increasing its stake in Toyota Industries Corp (TICO), in a bid to stop the privatisation of the materials handling equipment manufacturer... Continue reading
Fact of the week
The two internal cavities in our nose called nostrils function as separate organs. Each nostril has its own set of turbinates and olfactory receptors. The two independent organs work together through a mechanism called the nasal cycle, where one nostril is dominant for air intake while the other rests and is better at detecting scents.