AUTOMATED STORAGE, RETRIEVAL SYSTEM REVENUES TO TOP US$15B BY 2030

Investment in warehouse automation and management systems continues to rise as supply chains look to resolve exposed weaknesses and create greater resilience to macroeconomic headwinds.

 

According to global technology intelligence firm ABI Research, Automated Storage & Retrieval System (AS/RS) revenues are expected to surpass US$15 billion globally by 2030, and Warehouse Management System (WMS) revenues are expected to exceed US$10 billion by the same period.

 

"Global supply chain challenges over the last three years have highlighted the need for digitalization and a deeper restructuring of inventory management," said Ryan Wiggin, Supply Chain Management & Logistics Industry analyst at ABI Research.

 

"Labour constraints, geopolitical trade shifts, and inventory gluts continue to pressure warehouse operations, and the most impacted organizations continue to be those with lower focus on digital transformations," he added.

 

In addition to the growth in automation and management systems, high investment in hardware and devices is also expected to increase worker productivity, as manual worker involvement remains necessary alongside the adoption of automated equipment.

 

The report noted that global shipments of handheld devices for warehouse workers will grow at a CAGR of 20% by 2030.

 

The new warehouse building is also expected to drop by as much as 35% in 2023 compared to 2022.

 

ABI added that it is creating an even greater incentive to invest in the automation of current facilities to ease operational constraints. Disruption to new developments will be short-lived, with steady growth in warehouse construction expected to 2030, led by a much greater CAGR in global e-commerce fulfilment centre development at 18%.

 

"Successful deployments by Tier One organizations continue to spur the adoption of technologies within small-medium enterprises. Solutions providers must continue to offer accessible adoption through as-a-service models and scalable structures, and exploring partnerships with complementary technology will be key to deploying market-leading end-to-end solutions," Wiggin said.

 

These findings are from ABI Research's Smart Warehousing market data report.