SAN FRANCISCO, CA, UNITED STATES, January 22, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — Biomedical optics, microfabrication, lasers, displays, optoelectronic components: these are enabling technologies that sit at the core of today’s most strategic industries, from healthcare to aerospace. For the first time, Italy takes part in SPIE Photonics West 2026 with a collective showcase of 12 exhibiting companies, curated by the Italian Trade Agency (ITA) at one of the world’s most influential annual events for the optics and photonics industry. Optics and photonics—technologies that combine optics and electronics to process information—are a fast-growing, strategic domain where cutting-edge research meets industrial scale-up. In Italy, the sector is worth more than €1 billion.
SPIE Photonics West is widely regarded as the leading global connector between scientific innovation and real-world applications. The 2026 exhibition is taking place at San Francisco’s Moscone Center from January 20–22.
The program maps the main directions shaping the photonics ecosystem: biomedical optics and biophotonics, industrial lasers, optoelectronics, microfabrication, and displays serving a wide range of industries. The show’s cross-sector lens connects devices, components, and solutions designed to integrate into larger systems.
The 12 companies in the Italian collective showcase bring industrial know-how and specialized capabilities that align with the major currents in photonics today—from sensing and optoelectronics to imaging and measurement, and from laser applications to micro-processing—offering technologies that speak to the needs of high-tech industries and the frontier of applied research. The exhibitors are ALITE (Turin), Eye-Tech (Carrara), GEM Elettronica (San Benedetto del Tronto, Ascoli Piceno), Gestione Silo (Scandicci, Florence), Julight (Pavia), Optosensing (Naples), ppqSense (Sesto Fiorentino, Florence), QTI (Florence), Rotonium (Gemona del Friuli, Udine), Specto Photonics (Milan), Tecnottica Consonni (Calco, Lecco), and TEDIEL (Milan).
Italy’s photonics and optoelectronics ecosystem is among Europe’s fastest-growing markets for light-based semiconductor devices—technologies behind everything from photodiodes and laser diodes to advanced sensing and imaging components. Many of these devices rely on silicon and composite III–V semiconductors engineered at micro- and nano-scale to leverage quantum effects and improve performance in applications such as gas sensing, lasers, biosensors, and optical detection.
Across Europe, the optoelectronics market is projected to grow from $3.284 billion in 2024 to $4.255 billion by 2030. Within this landscape, Italy’s photonics market (excluding life-sciences-related technologies) is expected to rise from $284.8 million in 2024 to $384.7 million by 2030, posting annual growth above 5%—the second-highest rate among European countries.
That momentum is tied to the breadth of Italy’s industrial base—especially automotive, aerospace and defense, power generation, industrial automation, and robotics.
Life sciences provides a second, larger pillar for photonics. Italy’s biophotonics market is estimated at more than $950 million in 2023 and is expected to grow to $1.6 billion, supported by a collaborative network that brings together universities, the National Research Council (CNR), and startups developing advanced imaging, diagnostics, therapeutic applications, biosensors, and nanobiotechnologies.
The Italy Pavilion offers a broad look at solutions spanning photonics, precision optics, and quantum technologies. The showcase ranges from lasers and systems that control and “shape” light for industrial use to fiber-optic sensors that track the condition of infrastructure and the environment. Alongside them are image sensors designed for AI-driven applications, built to keep performance stable even as operating conditions shift.
Manufacturing capabilities include custom optics and advanced instrument-building —serving fields from space and defense to biomedical—as well as contactless solutions for measuring vibration and process quality. The Pavilion also features platforms that convert sensing signals and data into operational insights for continuous monitoring, plus electronics and instrumentation that drive and measure laser experiments with high precision, including isotopic analysis applications.
In security and networking, the Pavilion includes systems that strengthen communications protection through “quantum-ready” approaches. On the computing side, it also highlights photonic quantum processors designed to operate “in the field” without complex infrastructure. The overview is rounded out by compact, label-free tools for analyzing materials and biological samples; capabilities for producing traceable, certified optical components for international markets; and ultra-precise timing systems used in photonics, LiDAR, and time–frequency synchronization.
Roberto Rafaschieri
Blum
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