The 29th edition of the world’s most significant seafood trade exhibition, Seafood Expo Global/Seafood Processing Global, will be the largest in the event’s history, according to Diversified Communications, the event’s organizer. The event, which will be held from April 25–27 in the Gran Via de Fira de Barcelona, will as of right now include more than 2,000 exhibiting enterprises from 87 different nations as well as 68 regional and national pavilions.
With less than a month until the event in 2023, Seafood Expo Global/Seafood Processing Global has increased in size and now has 49,299 net square meters of exhibit space, which is a 24 percent increase from the event’s inaugural edition in Barcelona in 2022 and more than a 21 percent increase over the largest edition of the Expo ever held in 2019. The exhibit space of the Seafood Processing Global hall has increased by 21% from 2022, which is an excellent growth.
Atunes y Lomos, Blumar, Golden Fish Sarl, Grntvedt Group, Metarex Spa, North Pacific Seafood Pte Ltd, Pereira Productos del Mar, and Pickenpack Seafoods GmbH are just a few of the 776 first-time exhibitors who will be present at the 2023 edition of Seafood Expo Global. First-time participants in Seafood Processing Global include Activa Food Tech SAU, Aquatiq AS, Lineage Logistics, and Van de Velde Packing Group.
During three days, the city will serve as the largest worldwide platform for the sector once more, solidifying the event’s strategic global standing. The participation of nations that weren’t represented at the previous event, including Austria, Barbados, Côte d’Ivoire, Cyprus, Gambia, Hong Kong, Hungary, Moldova, Myanmar, New Caledonia, Pakistan, Philippines, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Serbia, Seychelles, Solomon Islands, Suriname, and Switzerland, has been confirmed for 2023.
There will be 68 regional and national pavilions at the event this year. There will be new nation pavilions for Australia, Saudi Arabia, the Seychelles, and the Solomon Islands. With new regional pavilions, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and the United States will be represented, and Galicia is returning to the festival. The return of pavilions with more show space, such as those from China, the Spanish regions of Catalonia and Galicia, Portugal, and the Netherlands for Seafood Expo Global, and Norway for Seafood Processing Global, will also be seen at the Expo.
Barcelona will benefit from the 29th edition to the tune of more than 150 million euros, according to estimates. According to Liz Plizga, group vice president for Diversified Communications, “the event gives the industry with a vital platform to conduct business on a global scale and make a substantial beneficial influence on the local economy.” “We will once more bring together industry buyers and suppliers over three days to foster business ties, find new goods, tools, and services, examine current trends, and have talks about the present and upcoming difficulties facing the seafood industry. The need for the fish business to interact in person is reinforced by the Expo’s expansion. Also, it demonstrates that the decision to relocate the Expo to Barcelona and a cutting-edge, modern facility was the right one, presenting additional chances for expansion “said Plizga.
Find out more at: https://www.seafoodexpo.com/global/