logo
From Triumph to Tomorrow: Bakery China 2025 Wraps Up, Prepares for Next Chapter

From Triumph to Tomorrow: Bakery China 2025 Wraps Up, Prepares for Next Chapter

Korea Herald27-05-2025

SHANGHAI, May 27, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Bakery China 2025 concluded its record-setting four-day run on May 22, 2025 at the National Exhibition and Convention Center (NECC) in Shanghai, reaffirming its status as the leading international event for business development and industry innovation in the baking and confectionery sectors. The show delivered forward-looking insights through immersive, hands-on experiences and fostered global industry connections, bringing together Chinese and international thought leadership to shape the future of the field.
Held under the theme Empowering Innovation, Bridging the Globe, Building the Future, this year's edition assembled more than 2,200 exhibitors who unveiled over 10,000 innovations across:
The exhibition pioneered interactive "real-world scenario" demonstrations including:
The hands-on approach transformed the venue into a dynamic innovation lab, accelerating the industry's shift from high-volume models to value-driven, quality-focused solutions.
Debut of the "Belt and Road Bakery Corridor" Strengthens Global Engagement
Reinforcing its role as a global innovation hub, Bakery China 2025 launched its landmark " Belt and Road Bakery Corridor", spotlighting cross-cultural exchange through specialty ingredients, heritage techniques, and East-meets-West culinary fusion.
The exhibition attracted professional buyers from 130+ countries and regions, facilitating 3,000+ business matchmaking sessions, including:
This year's event further cemented Bakery China's position as the world's leading platform for cross-border bakery trade and collaboration.
Advancing the Industry Through Education, Competition, and Experience-Driven Zones
Bakery China 2025 solidified its position as the industry's premier knowledge-sharing hub, combining high-stakes competitions, expert-led forums, and hands-on innovation zones to drive global bakery advancement.
Industry Competitions Raise the Bar
Marquee events included:
Thought Leadership Forums
20+ conference sessions addressed critical topics across the value chain:
Hundreds of industry experts provided actionable insights, attracting record attendance from senior decision-makers and professionals.
Immersive Innovation on Display
Special zones delivered experiential learning:
Bakery China continues to set the agenda for the industry's future. This year's record participation demonstrates the event's growing role in shaping global standards through open collaboration and technological leadership.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

[Editorial] Bridge divisions
[Editorial] Bridge divisions

Korea Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Korea Herald

[Editorial] Bridge divisions

President Lee should integrate nation to overcome security, trade crises Lee Jae-myung of the liberal Democratic Party of Korea was elected president on Tuesday, ending six months of turmoil stemming from his predecessor's botched attempt to impose martial law on Dec. 3, 2024. While South Korea has been embroiled in its own political chaos, the international situation and trade scene changed rapidly. Donald Trump was inaugurated as the president of the United States and US-China relations soured. The US, warning of a potential Chinese invasion of Taiwan, has indicated a possible shift of US Forces Korea's focus. It has also piled pressure on Seoul to shoulder more of the costs for stationing US troops. North Korea has learned modern tactics fighting on the front line with Ukraine and received advanced weapons technology from Russia. The North's threats to South Korea have grown considerably. Washington is closely watching foreign countries' relations with China. Seoul has sided with the US for security while cooperating with China for trade, but it is unlikely that such a stance can be maintained under the Trump administration. China's movements are suspicious. Beijing has installed three large-scale structures within the Provisional Measures Zone of the Yellow Sea. The zone is a shared area where the exclusive economic zones of South Korea and China overlap. The action could be a "gray zone" tactic, or a deliberately ambiguous move aimed at expanding China's maritime jurisdiction. The US-China rivalry for hegemony in East Asia shakes the security situation on the Korean Peninsula. The new government has been given a difficult task to resolve complex diplomatic and security problems. The South Korean economy is in crisis at home and abroad. Its exports fell, impacted by US tariffs. Domestic demand remains stagnant and Korea marked negative growth in the first quarter. It is still a big ask to secure new momentum in high-tech industries, including semiconductors and artificial intelligence. National debt is snowballing. The Lee government should quickly take measures to revive demand and investment. It should also lift restrictions on company activity. Korea was in a state of presidential vacuum for about six months. There were limitations to its responses to security and trade issues. Summit diplomacy is urgent, and its starting point should be a summit with the US. South Korean security issues, such as USFK and North Korea, have become graver than ever. The US reprieve of its "reciprocal" tariffs is set to end July 8. Tariff negotiations should be finished before then. Also on this matter, summit communication will be useful. South Korea-Japan relations are important, too. Lee needs to add to the shuttle diplomacy that the previous governments in Seoul and Tokyo restored after 12 years. If the new government values national interests, there would be no reason to discontinue the summit cooperation mechanism. As for relations with China, many different interests are entangled. It is difficult to resolve them through working discussions alone. It would be worth utilizing the 2025 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Summit in Gyeongju in late October. Campaigns in this presidential election were fraught with mutual slander and accusations. The election is over, but conflict remains. Healing conflict and integrating people should be a priority for the new president. Past presidents have vowed to integrate people upon taking office, but they failed, surrounded by ardent supporters. The new president should not repeat the mistake of his predecessors. The Democratic Party holds a large majority of seats in the National Assembly. Lee has grabbed both executive and legislative power. Government policies and bills could be enforced quickly. But there is great concern about his leadership becoming dogmatic. The party proposed a bill to increase the number of Supreme Court justices to 30. Lee could appoint all the new justices. The party also seeks to revise related law to invalidate a guilty verdict on his election law violation. The party could practically dominate the judiciary if it so desires. All the people can do is hope the president will not seek greater power. He might as well use his power toward integration. The ultimate way to overcome crises facing the nation lies in becoming a president for all, not only for his supporters.

STRADVISION collaborates with Arm to Accelerate the Future of AI-Defined Vehicles
STRADVISION collaborates with Arm to Accelerate the Future of AI-Defined Vehicles

Korea Herald

time7 hours ago

  • Korea Herald

STRADVISION collaborates with Arm to Accelerate the Future of AI-Defined Vehicles

SEOUL, South Korea, June 4, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- STRADVISION, a disruptive leader in AI-powered automotive perception software, proudly supports Arm in its announcement of Arm® Zena™ Compute Subsystems (CSS), a pre-integrated and validated platform designed to accelerate development for the AI-defined vehicle. As vehicles become increasingly defined by their software capabilities, automakers and their technology partners face growing demands for scalable, high-performance, and safety-enabled compute platforms. Zena CSS, Arm's first-generation CSS for automotive, is purpose-built to address this transformation, offering a trusted and unified compute platform that supports next-generation workloads across central compute, cockpit, and ADAS domains. "At STRADVISION, we're focused on enabling the next generation of vehicles with intelligent, high-efficiency perception systems," said Philip Vidal, CBO of STRADVISION. "Our partnership with Arm makes it easier for OEMs and Tier 1s to scale from entry-level ADAS to premium autonomous features, all while future-proofing their investment." STRADVISION's support for the Arm platform ensures performance portability and flexibility across generations of SoCs from multiple silicon partners. Through this collaboration, STRADVISION is delivering highly efficient, scalable perception software optimized for Arm-based platforms, including Zena CSS, enabling faster time-to-market and more flexibility for OEMs, Tier 1s, and silicon providers across a broad range of SoCs and vehicle segments. This approach empowers automakers to standardize on a single software stack while reducing complexity and accelerating time to market. The collaboration highlights both companies' shared dedication to open, standards-based platforms and aligns with Arm's commitment to ecosystem-led initiatives like SOAFEE that foster innovation, reduce integration friction, and support continuous software evolution. STRADVISION's support for Arm architecture ensures portability and long-term investment protection, allowing automakers to deploy its advanced perception stack seamlessly across multiple generations of hardware, from entry-level ADAS to high-end autonomous driving features. A key part of what STRADVISION is leveraging is the availability of natively-accelerated virtual platforms based on Zena CSS to optimize software stacks for future Arm-based automotive SoCs. By aligning STRADVISION SVNet with virtual Zena CSS platforms, we enable OEMs to begin software development and testing significantly earlier in the cycle, cutting time-to-production and enabling scalable, continuous integration and deployment. This is especially critical for STRADVISION's advanced perception stacks, which support automated driving at L2+ level and above, where extensive sensor data must be processed to meet rigorous testing demands. "Automakers and their partners face growing expectations from drivers to deliver AI-defined features that enhance autonomous driving assistance and personalize the in-cabin experience. With the support of ecosystem partners like STRADVISION, Arm Zena CSS lays the foundation for safer, smarter, and more efficient next-generation automotive systems," said Suraj Gajendra, vice president of automotive products and software solutions, Automotive Line of Business, Arm. For more information on STRADVISION and its cutting-edge technologies, please visit STRADVISION. About STRADVISION Founded in 2014, STRADVISION is an automotive industry pioneer in artificial intelligence-based vision perception technology for ADAS. The company is accelerating the advent of fully autonomous vehicles by making ADAS features available at a fraction of the market cost compared with competitors. STRADVISION's SVNet is being deployed on various vehicle models in partnership with OEMs; can power ADAS and autonomous vehicles worldwide; and is serviced by over 300 employees in Seoul, San Jose, Detroit, Tokyo, Shanghai, and Dusseldorf. STRADVISION has been honored with Frost & Sullivan's 2022 Global Technology Innovation Leadership Award, the Gold Award at the 2022 and 2021 AutoSens Awards for Best-in-Class Software for Perception Systems, and the 2020 Autonomous Vehicle Technology ACES Award in Autonomy (software category). In addition, STRADVISION and its software have achieved TISAX's AL3 standard for information security management, as well as being certified to the ISO 9001:2015 for Quality Management Systems and ISO 26262 for Automotive Functional Safety.

Trump says deal with Xi 'extremely hard' as steel tariffs double
Trump says deal with Xi 'extremely hard' as steel tariffs double

Korea Herald

time10 hours ago

  • Korea Herald

Trump says deal with Xi 'extremely hard' as steel tariffs double

Donald Trump said on Wednesday that it was "extremely hard" to reach a deal with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, but the EU touted progress in its own trade talks with Washington even though the US president doubled global metal tariffs. Trump's latest trade moves came as ministers from Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development countries gathered in Paris to discuss the outlook for the world economy in light of a US hardball approach that has rattled world markets. Trump's sweeping tariffs on allies and adversaries have strained ties with trading partners and sparked a flurry of negotiations to avoid the duties. The White House has suggested the president will speak to Xi this week, raising hopes they can soothe tensions and speed up a trade deal between the world's two biggest economies. However, early on Wednesday, Trump appeared to dampen hopes for a quick deal. "I like President XI of China, always have, and always will, but he is VERY TOUGH, AND EXTREMELY HARD TO MAKE A DEAL WITH!!!" he posted on his Truth Social platform. Asked about the remarks during a regular press briefing, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian said: "The Chinese side's principles and stance on developing Sino-US relations are consistent." China was the main target of Trump's April tariff blitz, hit with levies of 145 percent on its goods and triggering tit-for-tat tariffs of 125 percent on US imports. Both sides agreed to temporarily de-escalate in May, after Trump delayed most sweeping measures on other countries until July 9. His latest remarks came hours after he increased his tariffs on aluminum and steel from 25 percent to 50 percent, raising temperatures with various partners while exempting Britain from the higher levy. EU trade commissioner Maros Sefcovic said after talks with US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer on the sidelines of the OECD meeting in Paris that raising the metal tariffs "doesn't help the negotiations". The two sides were nonetheless "making progress" in their negotiations, Sefcovic said at a news conference. Goods from the 27-nation bloc will be hit with 50-percent tariffs on July 9 unless it reaches a deal with Washington. The EU has vowed to retaliate. "We did very much focus on these negotiations, and I still believe in them," Sefcovic said, adding that he was optimistic that a "positive result" could be reached. The US-EU meeting took place a day after the OECD cut its forecast for global economic growth, blaming Trump's tariff blitz for the downgrade. "We need to come up with negotiated solutions as quickly as possible, because time is running out," German economy minister Katherina Reiche warned. French trade minister Laurent Saint-Martin said: "We have to keep our cool and always show that the introduction of these tariffs is in no one's interest." After talks between UK Trade Secretary Jonathan Reynolds and Greer on Tuesday, London said that imports from the UK would remain at 25 percent for now. Both sides needed to work out duties and quotas in line with the terms of a recently signed trade pact. "We're pleased that as a result of our agreement with the US, UK steel will not be subject to these additional tariffs," a British government spokesperson said. The Group of Seven advanced economies -- Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States -- was due to hold separate trade talks on Wednesday. Mexico will request an exemption from the higher tariff, Economy Minister Marcelo Ebrard said, arguing that it was unfair because the United States exports more steel to its southern neighbour than it imports. "It makes no sense to put a tariff on a product in which you have a surplus," Ebrard said. Mexico is highly vulnerable to Trump's trade wars because 80 percent of its exports go to the United States, its main partner. While some of Trump's most sweeping levies face legal challenges, they have been allowed to remain in place for now as an appeals process takes place. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt confirmed on Tuesday that the Trump administration sent letters to governments pushing for offers by Wednesday as the July 9 deadline approached. (AFP)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store