According to supplychaindigital.com, Supply Chain LIVE: The London Summit will convene on 8–9 September 2026 at the QEII Centre in Westminster, drawing more than 1,000 attendees and featuring over 50 speakers.
Risk and Resilience as Core Focus
The summit — co-located with Procurement LIVE and Sustainability LIVE — centers on operational adaptation amid persistent global volatility. As stated in the source, businesses have shifted focus from pure efficiency toward resilience, requiring predictive capabilities to avoid disruption or sustain operations during turbulence. A dedicated panel titled Supply Chain Risk & Resilience will run on 8 September from 12:15–13:00 BST on the Supply Chain Stage.
Data-Driven Drivers of Reshaping
According to the PwC 2025 Digital Trends in Operations Survey, 91% of organisations cited US trade policy as a major catalyst for supply chain restructuring. In parallel, 87% identified rising geopolitical tension as directly correlated with accelerated adoption of flexible, technology-enabled operations. These figures anchor the event’s emphasis on AI-powered predictive analytics, digital twins, and multi-tier supplier transparency — tools enabling trial runs of mitigation strategies without real-world cost exposure.
Strategic Levers in Practice
Attendees will explore concrete resilience levers including:
- Strengthening supplier relationships across tiers to improve early-warning visibility
- Deploying digital twins to simulate responses to tariff shocks, climate disruptions, or conflict-related port closures
- Integrating sustainability initiatives — such as circular logistics design and Scope 3 emissions tracking — as structural resilience enablers, not just compliance measures
Industry Context and Precedent
This summit reflects broader industry action: Maersk launched its AI-driven ‘Twill’ platform in Q1 2025 to forecast port congestion delays with 82% accuracy across 42 global hubs; DHL reported a 37% reduction in unplanned shipment reroutes after deploying real-time geopolitical risk dashboards in 2024; and the EU’s CSDDD implementation deadline (1 January 2026) has driven 64% of Fortune Global 500 supply chain leaders to map Tier 2+ suppliers — up from 29% in 2022 (per MIT CTL 2025 Resilience Benchmark). For practitioners, this means resilience is no longer measured in buffer stock alone, but in data latency (<5 minutes), supplier response SLAs (<2 hours), and scenario-testing cadence (quarterly minimum).
Source: supplychaindigital.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










