Siemens unveiled a flurry of new AI technologies and partnerships at the CES show in Las Vegas this week, with the multinational technology company saying it will support the acceleration of industrial AI across all sectors.
“Industrial AI is no longer a feature; it is a force that will shape the next century,” Roland Busch, CEO of Siemens AG, said during an event. ces keynote speaker. “Siemens is providing our customers with AI-native capabilities, end-to-end intelligence embedded across design, engineering and operations to help them anticipate issues, accelerate innovation and reduce costs.”
An expanded partnership is at the heart of Siemens’ move NVIDIA Co-developing what the companies call an industrial AI operating system, designed to help customers build and operate physical AI systems.
Under the partnership, Nvidia will provide AI infrastructure, simulation libraries, models and frameworks, while Siemens will contribute industrial software, hardware and domain expertise.
The collaboration will focus on four main areas: AI-native electronic design automation, AI-native simulation, AI-powered adaptive manufacturing and supply chain, and AI factory,
Together, the companies are aiming to build the world’s first fully AI-powered, adaptive manufacturing site, starting with Siemens in 2026. Electronics factory in Erlangen, Germany,
“Generative AI and accelerated computing have transformed digital twins from passive simulations to active intelligence of the physical world,” Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said at the conference. “Our partnership with Siemens combines the world’s leading industrial software with Nvidia’s full-stack AI platform…empowering industries to simulate complex systems in software, then seamlessly automate and operate them in the physical world.”
digital twin composer
Along with the partnership, Siemens launched Digital Twin Composer, a platform to “power the industrial metaverse at scale.”
Siemens’ combination digital twin technology with nvidia omniverse With simulation libraries and real-time engineering data, companies can use the platform to create and test high-fidelity virtual models of products and processes, applying AI to simulations before making physical changes.
The platform will be available on the Siemens Accelerator Marketplace in mid-2026; Its initial customer is PepsiCo.
beverage company The technology was deployed in selected US manufacturing and warehouse facilities. According to the company, using Siemens software, Nvidia Omniverse and computer vision, PepsiCo conducted high-quality recreations of entire plants, simulated operations and identified 90% of potential issues before physical implementation.
industrial ai copilot
Siemens also unveiled nine new AI-powered industrial co-pilots in its software portfolio, including Teamcenter, Polarion, and Opcenter.
Co-Pilot is designed to streamline product data navigation, automate compliance workflows, and optimize manufacturing operations. Siemens said the tools will also help reduce errors, speed up regulatory approvals and drive cost savings on the shop floor.
All Co-Pilots will be available on the Accelerator Marketplace.