Mission 2044 was a moment of truth.
An opportunity to look each other in the eye, as an industry, and acknowledge that the time for “we’ll see” is over.
Additive manufacturing is no longer a promise, it’s a responsibility.
A responsibility to innovate, to make production systems more independent, sustainable, and capable of responding to a world that changes faster than ever before.
Every talk, every exchange during the event confirmed what has guided us at Roboze for years: technology is the means, not the end. The real goal is to create tangible value for those who build, defend, and explore.
In the coming decade, the Defense and Aerospace sectors will experience a quiet but radical revolution.
It won’t be just about producing lighter or higher-performing components — it will be about rethinking the very concept of production.
Those who control their processes, materials, and data will also control their industrial destiny.
That’s why I often speak of technological awareness, because that’s where true sovereignty begins.
Additive manufacturing becomes the language through which companies will write their own independence.
No longer supply chains, but connected, resilient value networks.
No longer cost logic, but impact logic.
Mission 2044 reminded us that the future isn’t something to predict — it’s something to build.
Every partner, every engineer, every decision-maker called to act today carries a shared responsibility: to turn vision into action.
At Roboze, we’ll continue to do our part with the same determination that brought us here: bridging science, industry, and courage to redefine how the world manufactures.