Israeli firm Assembrix and partners HP, Sparely, and Korall Engineering completed secure remote 3D printing operations for the oil and gas sector. The project proved that encrypted, distributed manufacturing can bolster supply chains.
Israeli company Assembrix and its US, Dutch, and Norwegian partners have completed a global series of secure remote 3D printing operations for the oil and gas sector, the firms announced this week. Working with HP in the United States, Sparely in the Netherlands, and Korall Engineering in Norway, Assembrix enabled encrypted, remotely managed production of certified polymer spare parts using HP's Multi Jet Fusion systems.

Boosting Supply Chain Resilience
The project demonstrated how distributed manufacturing can deliver critical components near the point of need, reducing lead times and strengthening supply-chain resilience. Executives from all four companies said the series proves secure, scalable digital production is now viable for the energy industry.
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