• AMTIL Member Login
  • Subscribe to AMTIL Communication
AMTIL
  • AMTAMT-Logo-Stack-Graduated-Grey
    • AMT Magazine
    • Magazine Archive
      • 2025 AMT Magazines
      • 2024 AMT Magazines
      • 2023 AMT Magazines
      • 2022 AMT Magazines
      • 2021 AMT Magazines
      • 2020 AMT Magazines
      • 2019 AMT Magazines
      • 2018 AMT Magazines
      • 2017 AMT Magazines
      • 2016 AMT Magazines
      • 2015 AMT Magazines
      • 2014 AMT Magazines
    • AMTIL Media Kit 2025
    • AMTIL Media Kit 2026
    • Testimonials
  • Australia Manufacture WeekAMW-Logo-Stack-Graduated-Colour
  • ManufactureLink
  • AAMN
    • About
    • Additive Processes
    • Contact Us
  • AMTAMT-Logo-Stack-Graduated-Grey
    • AMT Magazine
    • Magazine Archive
      • 2025 AMT Magazines
      • 2024 AMT Magazines
      • 2023 AMT Magazines
      • 2022 AMT Magazines
      • 2021 AMT Magazines
      • 2020 AMT Magazines
      • 2019 AMT Magazines
      • 2018 AMT Magazines
      • 2017 AMT Magazines
      • 2016 AMT Magazines
      • 2015 AMT Magazines
      • 2014 AMT Magazines
    • AMTIL Media Kit 2025
    • AMTIL Media Kit 2026
    • Testimonials
  • Australia Manufacture WeekAMW-Logo-Stack-Graduated-Colour
  • ManufactureLink
  • AAMN
    • About
    • Additive Processes
    • Contact Us
  • Our Brands
    • AMT
      • AMT Magazine
      • Magazine Archive
        • 2025 AMT Magazines
        • 2024 AMT Magazines
        • 2023 AMT Magazines
        • 2022 AMT Magazines
        • 2021 AMT Magazines
        • 2020 AMT Magazines
        • 2019 AMT Magazines
        • 2018 AMT Magazines
        • 2017 AMT Magazines
        • 2016 AMT Magazines
        • 2015 AMT Magazines
        • 2014 AMT Magazines
      • AMTIL Media Kit 2025
      • AMTIL Media Kit 2026
      • Testimonials
    • AMW
      • About AMW
      • AMW Website
    • MLink
    • AAMN
      • About
      • Additive Processes
      • Events & Networking
      • Contact Us
  • Industry News
  • Events & Networking
    • Events & Marketing
    • AMTIL
    • Member’s Events
    • Local
    • International
    • Gallery
  • Join AMTIL
  • Corporate Partnerships
    • Corporate Partnerships
    • William Buck
    • Commonwealth Bank
  • About
    • Who is AMTIL
    • Meet the Team
    • Meet the Board
    • Machine Tool Import Statistics
    • Building Skills for the Future of Manufacturing
  • Contact
Search
  • Top Left

  • Bottom Left

Industry News

Industry news

AMTIL actively keeps members up to date with the latest industry news and relevant economic announcements, with Industry News items posted on the AMTIL Industry News website. The Industry News is updated daily, either promoting late-breaking manufacturing industry news or republishing feature stories from AMT magazine.

AMTIL News Archives

  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • June 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • November 2020
  • October 2020
  • September 2020
  • August 2020
  • July 2020
  • June 2020
  • May 2020
  • April 2020
  • March 2020
  • February 2020
  • January 2020
  • December 2019
  • November 2019
  • October 2019
  • September 2019
  • August 2019
  • July 2019
  • June 2019
  • May 2019
  • April 2019
  • March 2019
  • February 2019
  • January 2019
  • December 2018
  • November 2018
  • October 2018
  • September 2018
  • August 2018
  • July 2018
  • June 2018
  • May 2018
  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • November 2017
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • December 2016
  • October 2016
  • September 2016
  • August 2016
  • July 2016
  • June 2016
  • May 2016
  • April 2016
  • December 2015
  • November 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015

AMTIL News Categories

  • Government News
  • Industry News
  • Member News
  • Product News
  • Technology News

Industry / Capability

  • Additive Manufacturing
  • Aerospace
  • Agriculture, Food & Beverage
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Automotive & Transport
  • Business Management
  • Compressors & Air Technology
  • Construction & Infrastructure
  • Cutting Tools
  • Defence
  • Electronics
  • Energy & Sustainability
  • Forming & Fabrication
  • Government News
  • Industry 4.0
  • Logistics
  • Manufacturing Software
  • Material Removal
  • Materials Handling
  • Metrology
  • Mining & Resources
  • Motors & Drives
  • Packaging
  • Plastics & Composites
  • Profile Cutting
  • Quality Inspection
  • Rail Transport
  • Raw Materials
  • Renewable Energy & Clean Tech
  • Robotics & Automation
  • Waste & Recycling
  • Welding
  • Workholding
April 16, 2026

No Time for Half Measures

**This story originally appeared in the April 2026 edition of AMT Magazine** Australian manufacturing is a sector built for this moment. The challenges are real, the pressures are well documented, but so is the opportunity, and it is bigger than many people recognise. Let’s start with the fundamentals. Australian manufacturing is our sixth-largest industry, contributing $137 billion in value-added output and employing 930,000 people. It generates 12.4% of our exports and accounts for 7.9% of national capital expenditure – outsized contributions for a sector representing just 5.1% of GDP. Critically, it is also Australia's most R&D-intensive industry, reinvesting 4.1% of value-added back into research and development. These are the numbers of a sector with genuine strength, deep capability, and a proven capacity to innovate. Yes, 2024 was a difficult year. After a strong post-pandemic rebound, conditions tightened as a sluggish domestic economy weighed on demand and global supply chains normalised. But the sector has navigated far harder periods than this, and the transformation underway is one we…
Read More
April 14, 2026

Australian Manufacturing Week 2026

**This story originally appeared in the April 2026 edition of AMT Magazine** Marking a milestone moment for Australia’s premier event for precision manufacturers and hosted by AMTIL with support from the Queensland Government, AMW brings together the nation’s most comprehensive display of advanced manufacturing technology. With a sold-out exhibition floor and a program designed to help Australian industry move faster, build capability, grow and diversify, AMW is expected to impress. Over more than 25 years, AMW has evolved into the definitive platform for evaluating world-leading equipment, gaining practical insight and making high-value connections. The 2026 edition extends that legacy to Queensland for the first time, reflecting the State’s growing prominence across defence, resources, aerospace, clean energy technologies and precision engineering. “Manufacturing is evolving rapidly across Australia, and Queensland is no exception,” said Lorraine Maxwell, CEO of AMTIL. “Queensland is home to a growing number of innovative manufacturers. AMW 2026 will highlight the strength of this local industry while continuing to serve as a national platform for showcasing excellence…
Read More
April 13, 2026

Digital Age

**This story originally appeared in the April 2026 edition of AMT Magazine** For Emil Dela Cruz, regional sales manager NSW for Kemppi Australia, digitalisation and automation are reshaping demand for welding across Australia. “We no longer manufacture any analogue models, so 100% of our models are digital,” Emil says, noting that the shift began around 2017–18 as Industry 4.0 began influencing manufacturing workflows. “Knowing that Industry 4.0 is digitalisation, Kemppi has been well ahead in incorporating programs and software that empower welders to weld better and faster. We have also been at the fore in delivering solutions that gather welding data to ensure compliance and quality, while boosting productivity.” This progression has positioned Kemppi as a technology leader, he says. “We deliver premium machines for high quality welding as well as digital solutions, and we continue to develop different types of products to meet various market requirements,” he says. “Given the breadth and depth of our product range, we target the entire welding market from small workshops and single contractors…
Read More
April 10, 2026

New Tricks

**This story originally appeared in the April 2026 edition of AMT Magazine** “Everything on this planet, at one point or another, has been screened… we’ve been doing screen media for well over 50 years as a business,” Multotec Australia VP sales and service Grahame Hopkins says. Whether it’s for the purposes of accurate product sizing or removing impurities or other undesirable materials, the creation of screens to filter food, extracted materials and other material is a well-established component of materials processing. With that broad experience comes a clear view of the persistent risks faced by operators working on screen decks, particularly when it comes to panel change‑outs. “One of the biggest problems with screen media is potential risk or damage to product and people,” Hopkins explains. Most screening decks use screening panels that are traditionally bolted or hammered into place, or installed using either a clip or pin system, and have to be prised out using a screwdriver.“So everything's working on lever and pinch points, fingers, hands, etc, and then obviously the…
Read More
March 30, 2026

Building Financial Foresight

**This story originally appeared in the February 2026 edition of AMT Magazine** In Australia’s dynamic manufacturing landscape, financial resilience is not just a strategic advantage, it’s a necessity. With fluctuating demand, rising input costs and global supply chain disruptions, manufacturers face increasing pressure to maintain operational stability while pursuing growth. At the heart of this challenge lies two indispensable financial tools: effective cash flow management and three-way forecasting. Forecasting isn’t just a process of putting numbers in a spreadsheet hoping they’ll predict the future. It’s an opportunity for business owners to work alongside their finance departments and advisors to take a deep dive into the drivers of a business and really understand the cause and effect of change that can move the dial. Cash flow, the movement of money in and out of a business, is the lifeblood of any manufacturing operation. Unlike profitability, which is often measured on paper, cash flow reflects the real-time ability of a business to meet its obligations, pay suppliers, invest in equipment and fund expansion. In short, cash flow management enables manufacturers to…
Read More
March 24, 2026

Needs for High Speed Cutting

**This story originally appeared in the February 2026 edition of AMT Magazine** The high speed milling (HSM) of aluminium and its alloys requires cutting speeds at significantly higher than the standard rates. This approach ensures efficient material removal and excellent surface finish and accuracy. While there is no strict definition for what constitutes HSM speeds, it is generally accepted that they range from 1.5 to 4 times more than the typical speeds. Achieving HSM cutting speeds requires operating milling cutters at extremely high rotational velocities, often reaching 30,000 RPM or more. From a design perspective, general purpose milling cutters and cutting tools for high‑speed milling (HSM) of aluminium and its alloys are typically classified as either indexable tools, solid cutters – typically solid carbide endmills (SCEM), or SCEM assembled tools that mount replaceable cutting heads, primarily made of tungsten carbide. Machining at exceptionally high rotational velocity demands that milling tools withstand substantial centrifugal loads, maintain balancing quality, and ensure safety. A key goal is to achieve, at the design stage, a mass distribution…
Read More
March 18, 2026

Blast From the Future

**This story originally appeared in the February 2026 edition of AMT Magazine** Developed by accident overseas, adopted in Australia after investments from a food packaging printer and today used to restore fast jets – cold spray additive manufacturing (CSAM) technology is, one Melbourne specialist insists, “just another tool” in the advanced manufacturing toolbox. What Rosebank Engineering Senior Manager, Engineering and Projects Jarrod Watts means is that CSAM technology should be considered the same as any other specialist manufacturing process – like semi-automated shot peening or precision multi-axis CNC machining – a highly technical innovation, but one which is accessible to a wide pool of manufacturers. “There’s no doubt Australia is seen as a world leader in this innovative technology,” he says. “We’re no longer just sustaining Australian assets – we’re part of a global supply chain, and technologies like this help us compete and win on a global stage,” he says. “The momentum is certainly building, and the customer base is expanding. People are…
Read More
March 12, 2026

Above and Beyond

**This story originally appeared in the February 2026 edition of AMT Magazine** Amiga Engineering RFP program manager Dee Bourchier jokes that she decided to hire Jourdan Webb once he brought his own engine components to his interview. “I always tell people, if you’ve made something you’re really proud of, you’re welcome to bring it in… so when he’d brought in miniature engine components that he’d machined up outside of school… we were just like – ‘these are really good… when do you want to start?’” she says. Webb is one of two apprentices named as Manufacturing Apprentice of the Year at the 2025 Victorian Manufacturing Hall of Fame Awards, having recently entered the fourth year of his apprenticeship as a fitter and turner. But it was a career that almost came to a premature end when his first employer, which he describes as “an old-school valve shop,” closed shortly after he’d completed his first year as an apprentice. “I decided straight away I’d have to look…
Read More
March 10, 2026

Fresh Air

**This story originally appeared in the February 2026 edition of AMT Magazine** Daikin Australia has opened a new factory in the Sydney suburb of Chipping Norton which it says will help put local designs and skills at the centre. The new $28.2 million Factory 2 expands Daikin’s capability to produce customised Air Handling Units and Rooftop Packaged Air Conditioners for Australian buyers. Daikin Australia manufacturing general manager Nick McDonald explains the company’s Australian-made ducted units were engineered from the ground up for local clients. “They are designed to suit the Australian home… they have geometry such that they fit inside an Australian roof space, so they’re easy to install. They are designed so they come apart into several pieces, so they can be easily manhandled up into the roof space by our dealer group.” That Australian focus extends to performance in harsh conditions: “If you go to South Australia, the roofs are very hot. The temperature inside the roof cavity can be well in excess of 60 degrees, for example. So our equipment has…
Read More
March 7, 2026

Terry Wohlers on Additive Manufacturing: Where Australia Can Compete and Win

**This story originally appeared in the February 2026 edition of AMT Magazine** Terry Wohlers has provided technical and strategic advisory services on rapid product development, additive manufacturing (AM) and 3D printing for 38 years – to more than 280 organisations in 27 countries. As a principal author of industry-leading publication the Wohlers Report, he has an earned reputation as an industry leader. Here he discusses some of the trends emerging in AM and where Australia can make the most of new opportunities. Looking at AM on a global scale, where does Australia sit? The growth of AM globally has been historically strong. In the past 15 years, it has grown more than 22 per cent on average every year. This past year has not been as strong, but still a growth rate of 9.1 per cent. Of the US$21.9 billion of revenue the sector generated in 2024, about US$3.7 billion is tied to production applications – parts made for final use – a figure which grew by 12.1 per cent last year. Adoption…
Read More
March 3, 2026

How Things Work

**This story originally appeared in the February 2026 edition of AMT Magazine** “It’s really, really interesting seeing how things are made, and what it takes… Now I know and understand much of what was required to assemble things. It’s interesting seeing how things work.” Ten years ago, Melanie Kramer walked away from her retail job at a jeweller in inner-city Melbourne to help her sister Simone and Simone’s partner Brian at Boss Tooling, their year-old CNC machining company in Dandenong South. She’s still there today – running machines which today include two new Okuma 5-axis CNC mills and helping to refine designs on the factory floor to keep processes running smoothly. Both Melanie and Simone say they did a lot of learning on the job, with Simone initially learning management skills at Brian’s family company Cogley Enterprises before the couple branched out on their own. “I didn’t have any skills when I started – I got put in an office and didn’t even know what a purchase…
Read More
February 26, 2026

Opinion: Time to Listen to Engineers

**This story originally appeared in the February 2026 edition of AMT Magazine** By Martin U. Ripple, Chief Executive Officer, ANCA Group For much of modern history, engineers have been expected to advance humanity and build the future without being invited to shape it. They are often portrayed as technically brilliant but socially awkward, more comfortable with machines than people. A familiar cartoon shows a mother taking her child to the doctor, only to be told, “Oh no, it’s worse than I feared. Your son is going to be an engineer. The joke implies a lifelong condition of logic over emotion and facts over conversation. Yet this stereotype obscures a deeper truth. Almost everything that defines contemporary life from our homes and transport systems to our food supply chains, energy networks, medical devices and digital infrastructure - exists because engineers designed, built, tested and continuously improved it. While others debate direction, engineers quietly turn ideas into reality. Why then does a profession so central to modern civilisation…
Read More
February 20, 2026

Timing is Everything

**This story originally appeared in the October 2025 edition of AMT Magazine** Imagine this scenario: Your team installs a new collaborative robot application on the production line to automate what was once a manual task and introduce collaborative interaction with workers. Because the system does not rely on physical distance barriers such as perimeter guarding, it promises flexibility, space savings and productivity gains. The robot has been designed to operate under a power and force limiting (PFL) safety function, but no risk assessment was carried out to identify the contact scenarios, nor has validation been performed using a pressure and/or force measuring device. As a result, when the robot moves into action, its force and power output exceed the biomechanical limits set out in ISO 10218-2:2025, putting operators at risk of injury. It’s a stark reminder that a thorough risk assessment might have flagged that hazard and prompted better safeguards. Risk assessments are a cornerstone of workplace…
Read More
1 2 3 … 187
  • Top Left

  • Bottom Left

  • Right Top

  • Right Bottom

AMTIL Corporate Partners

The Australian Manufacturing Technology Institute Limited (AMTIL) is the peak national body, and manufacturing industry association in Australia representing the interests of manufacturing technology suppliers and users within the precision engineering and advanced manufacturing sector.

  • AMW
  • AMT MagazineAMT Logo Stack Graduated Grey
  • ManufactureLink
  • Australian Additive Manufacturing Network (AAMN)
Useful Links
  • AMW
  • AMT
  • ManufactureLink
  • Australian Additive Manufacturing Network (AAMN)
  • Industry News
  • Events & Networking
  • Corporate Partners
  • Contact
Help & Support
  • Privacy Policy
  • Editorial Guidelines
  • Complaints Handling
  • Event Code of Conduct
Contact

Suite 10, 5 Corporate Boulevard, Bayswater VIC  3153

www.amtil.com.au

+61 3 9800 3666

[email protected]

Copyright © 2025 AMTIL. All rights reserved

Web Design & SEO by Intesols

Thank you for visiting the AMTIL website,

In order to get the best experience out of the AMTIL website, please disable the adblocker.

  • Right Top

  • Right Bottom