- Core offerings include industrial automation, energy solutions, building technologies, mobility systems, and healthcare equipment, supporting resilient supply chains and resource-efficient factories across ASEAN.
- Sustainability milestones feature a 50% CO₂ e-reduction in operations, 81% material recycling, and 80% renewable electricity usage, with initiatives like climate education and rural digital infrastructure.
The heritage of Siemens
Siemens Pte Ltd, the Singapore arm of the global technology giant, operates as a key player in electronics and electrical engineering, focusing on industry, infrastructure, transport, and healthcare. Its portfolio encompasses drive technology, energy systems, financing, industrial automation, and services, alongside consumer products like electrical installations and home automation. In Singapore, the firm emphasises digital enterprise services to accelerate digitalisation, optimising transformation for organisations. Collaborations, such as with A*STAR for smart manufacturing, underscore its role in fostering AI-driven, sustainable production.
Founded globally in 1847 by Werner von Siemens as a telegraph workshop, the company evolved through milestones like the 1866 dynamo principle and international expansions to Russia and Norway. By 1856, workforce grew to 330, marking its shift to a multinational powerhouse. In ASEAN, Siemens Pte Ltd builds on this legacy, driving eco-efficiency and circular economy principles. Sustainability efforts include carbon neutrality by 2030, with initiatives like Cents4Sense donations, Little Scientists’ Day, and sustainable cold storage solutions. As Roland Busch, President and CEO of Siemens AG, stated: “Siemens combines the real and the digital worlds like no other company.”
Also Read: sideEffekt empowering businesses with enduring IT solutions
Also Read: Misaka Network Ltd: Revolutionising telecom with blockchain
Siemens tackles industrial challenges and innovations
The industrial technology sector in 2025 faces rising costs, skilled labour shortages, and cybersecurity risks, with breaches costing millions and talent gaps hindering AI adoption. Supply chain disruptions and compute demands from generative AI exacerbate issues, alongside environmental pressures for emissions reductions. Yet, innovations thrive: AI-integrated cobots, plug-and-produce solutions, digital twins, and 5G-enabled edge computing optimise operations, slashing downtime by 30%. Siemens aligns with these, deploying Building X for energy savings and data centre blueprints for sustainability. As Barbara Humpton, Siemens USA CEO, noted: “We will do this through innovations with a key set of technologies—digital twin, artificial intelligence (AI), and…” In a market projected to reach $443.54 billion by 2035, Siemens Pte Ltd’s focus on resilient, green tech positions it as a leader in ASEAN’s digital future.
