As system integrators we bring our knowledge from process technology and plant engineering together with software products from market leaders.
We have the flexibility to adapt to meet the local conditions.
Optimum process performance needs the input of experts in technology and automation. Only GEA specialists have the necessary know-how and are able to select and adapt control tools to offer optimum process performance. As integration specialists we offer automation solutions that are based on general software platforms. Advanced process control tools prove that we know our processes in detail, enabling us to provide stable, and robust process conditions with the highest efficiency levels and minimum energy consumption.
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GEA Codex® Academy is the knowledge-sharing platform for Codex, our scalable automation solution that’s based on the most frequently used systems in the industry (Siemens, Rockwell, AVEVA and Ignition).
GEA Codex® Process Control allows you to monitor and control all your processes — either batch or continuous, from single machines to large complex process lines — in real-time with a high degree of customization based on customer needs and expectations.
With GEA Codex® Remote Support, you can contact GEA automation engineers to solve any unforeseen situation related to a plant’s control system and resume production quickly.
Partner for a secure industrial control system: GEA Codex® Asset Care
The impact of global warming is increasingly apparent all over the world. Towns and cities everywhere face the same challenge: providing their communities with reliable, affordable, sustainably sourced heat. GEA spoke with an expert in the field, Kenneth Hoffmann, Manager, Heat Pumps at GEA Heating & Refrigeration Technologies, about tackling global warming faster.
Something caught Farmer Tom's eye. Instead of another product demo, GEA showcased innovations via AR. That's only the start of GEA's interactive digital farm.
GEA scientists are working with researchers at the Graz University of Technology to configure a homogenization process and technology that turns eucalyptus pulp into 3D-printed, organic structures mimicking human veins, arteries and other tissues.