Our butterfly valves enable a very high product quality, unique in this combination. They are characterized by their hygienic and carefully designed flow paths free from dead corners. Long-life gaskets reduce operating costs and do meet the world wide high hygienic demands for components in process plants.
Your investment pays off
The current generation of GEA butterfly valves provide users with considerable cost savings. Compact actuators and efficient control technology keep energy consumption as low as possible.
Carefully designed flow paths free from dead corners minimize product loss. Long-life gaskets reduce operating costs. Consumption of time, water and resources is considerably reduced, with a positive impact on staff and process productivity.
Your investment in modern process technology from GEA thus provides special advantages to pay off in the shortest time.
Efficiency
You score in terms of ecology
Sustainability
Service-orientation
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The GEA Hygienic Butterfly Valves provide a complete range of variants to serve any application. They are used as cost-effective shut-off elements on valve blocks, panels and pipe fences for product and cleaning.
GEA Hygienic Leakage Butterfly Valves offers an interesting valve variant for the mixproof separation of media.
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.
Companies like GEA process and store large amounts of sensitive data. However, security incidents, from ransomware attacks to physical intrusions and industrial espionage, are ever-expanding. GEA’s effective protection of its business partners’ data – as well as its own proprietary information – is evolving into a competitive advantage. We spoke with Iskro Mollov, GEA’s Chief Information Security Officer, about what it takes to protect a global business in a volatile world.