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日期

EATS Chicago

十月 26, 2026 - 十月 28, 2026

EATS, the modern evolution of the well-known Process Expo (renamed in 2023), has redefined how industry professionals experience trade fairs in the food and beverage sector. Rather than remaining a purely technical exhibition, it has transformed into a living ecosystem where innovation, history, and business strategy intersect. Hosted in Chicago, the event reflects both the legacy and the forward momentum of one of the world’s most influential food capitals.

From the very first steps inside the exhibition halls, it becomes clear that EATS is designed with purpose. It is not just about machines or production lines it is about how the global food system is adapting to new realities. Participants come here to rethink processes, discover smarter solutions, and understand how to remain competitive in an industry that is changing faster than ever before.

From “Process Expo” to EATS: a shift in industry thinking

The transition from Process Expo to EATS was not simply a rebranding it marked a conceptual shift. While the original exhibition focused heavily on processing technologies, the new format embraces a broader vision of the food industry. Today, it includes sustainability, automation, digitalization, and even consumer-driven innovation.

This shift mirrors the transformation happening within the sector itself. Food production is no longer just about efficiency; it is about adaptability, transparency, and responsibility. EATS captures this evolution by bringing together diverse solutions that address both technical and strategic challenges.

Visitors are no longer just engineers or plant managers. The audience now includes product developers, sustainability experts, and business strategists, all searching for ideas that can shape the future of their companies.

Chicago: where history still shapes innovation

Few cities in the world carry a food industry legacy as powerful as Chicago. Long before modern trade fairs existed, the city was already setting global standards in food production. In the late 19th century, it earned the title “the world’s butcher,” a reflection of its dominance in meatpacking and distribution.

The Union Stock Yards, operating from 1865 to 1971, were at the center of this transformation. They introduced new levels of efficiency and scale that changed how food was processed and transported worldwide. Even today, their influence can be felt in modern supply chain systems.

Chicago’s contribution does not end with meatpacking. It also gave rise to globally recognized brands such as Kraft Foods, Quaker Oats, and McDonald’s. These companies helped shape consumer habits and introduced innovations in packaging, marketing, and product development. Hosting EATS in such a city creates a powerful connection between past achievements and future ambitions.

Technology that redefines production realities

At its core, EATS remains a showcase of advanced technologies but with a modern perspective. The focus is not just on what machines can do, but on how they integrate into smarter, more flexible production systems.

Exhibitors present solutions that address real industry pressures: rising costs, labor shortages, sustainability demands, and the need for consistent quality. What stands out is the emphasis on adaptability technologies that can evolve alongside the businesses that use them.

Core innovations highlighted at EATS

The exhibition covers a wide and carefully curated range of solutions:

Intelligent processing systems for meat, dairy, and plant-based products
Advanced packaging technologies designed for both safety and sustainability
Robotics and automation that reduce manual intervention
Digital monitoring tools for quality control and traceability
Energy-efficient systems that support environmentally responsible production

These innovations demonstrate that modern food production is no longer linear. It is interconnected, data-driven, and increasingly responsive to external demands.

Business as a dialogue, not just a transaction

What truly sets EATS apart is the way it approaches business interaction. The event is structured to encourage dialogue rather than simple transactions. Conversations here tend to go deeper focusing on long-term solutions instead of short-term deals.

Professionals attend not only to buy or sell, but to understand. They ask how technologies can be adapted, how processes can be improved, and how partnerships can create lasting value. This mindset transforms the exhibition floor into a space of collaboration rather than competition.

Practical value for participants

For those involved in the industry, EATS offers tangible advantages:

Direct exposure to technologies that solve current operational challenges
Access to decision-makers from across the global food supply chain
Opportunities to test ideas through real-time discussions
Insights into how competitors and partners are evolving
A clearer understanding of where the industry is heading

These benefits make the event particularly valuable for companies that are not just maintaining operations, but actively seeking growth.

Learning as a continuous process

Another defining element of EATS is its strong educational component. The event recognizes that innovation cannot exist without understanding. Through expert-led sessions, panel discussions, and live demonstrations, participants gain access to knowledge that goes beyond surface-level trends.

Topics often include digital transformation, supply chain resilience, and the growing role of sustainability in production decisions. These discussions are grounded in real-world experience, making them immediately applicable.

Unlike static presentations, many sessions encourage interaction. This creates a feedback loop where ideas are tested, refined, and expanded through collective input.

A future shaped by connection and adaptability

EATS ultimately reflects an industry that is learning to adapt without losing its foundation. It acknowledges the importance of history especially in a city like Chicago while focusing on the tools and strategies needed for the future.

The event shows that progress in the food sector is not driven by technology alone. It is shaped by relationships, shared knowledge, and the ability to respond to change. In this sense, EATS becomes more than a trade fair it becomes a space where the future of food is actively negotiated and reimagined.

For anyone involved in the food and beverage industry, EATS offers something rare: not just information, but perspective. And in a rapidly evolving world, that perspective can make all the difference.