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Supply Chain and Logistics News (February 2nd-5th 2026)

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Supply Chain And Logistics News (february 2nd 5th 2026)

In this week’s update, the global trade landscape takes center stage as a landmark U.S.-India agreement promises to slash tariffs and reshape sourcing strategies by March. Domestically, the push for resilience is accelerating through massive infrastructure investments, from Eli Lilly’s new $3.5 billion pharmaceutical hub to the launch of “Project Vault,” a $12 billion critical minerals reserve. As legal wins for offshore wind projects further signal a shift in energy logistics, the underlying challenge remains data orchestration; we look at why unifying fragmented systems is now the baseline for navigating these complex market fluctuations.

India and the U.S. Make Trade Announcements, Resulting in Reduced Tariffs

The recent trade announcement between the U.S. and India represents a significant shift in strategic intent, with Indian Trade Minister Piyush Goyal confirming on February 5, 2026, that a formal deal is expected to be signed in March. While the proposed reduction of U.S. tariffs on Indian goods from 50% to 18% and India’s potential pivot from Russian oil to at least $500 billion in American energy and technology purchases offer major competitive implications, the deal currently lacks the granular detail required for immediate execution. A joint statement is expected within days to outline the first official timeline, yet for supply chain professionals, uncertainty remains regarding specific HS code tariff schedules and rules of origin. Until formal documentation is finalized next month, logistics leaders should treat these developments as strategic options, focusing on scenario modeling and monitoring regulatory updates before committing to structural shifts in sourcing or manufacturing.

Unifying Real-Time Data for End-to-End Supply Chain Orchestration with Intersystems

Achieving true end-to-end supply chain orchestration requires overcoming the persistent barrier of siloed and fragmented data. A recent survey of 450 supply chain practitioners highlights that nearly half of organizations struggle with little to no integration across disparate systems, leading to significant gaps in visibility and operational transparency. To move beyond traditional management silos, many leaders are turning toward an “ultimate control tower” approach, which utilizes real-time data and predictive modeling to synchronize planning, sourcing, and logistics. By adopting a framework that emphasizes seeing, understanding, and optimizing data before acting, companies can gain the agility needed to respond to market fluctuations and disruptions. Ultimately, unifying data across multi-tier networks allows for faster decision-making and improved margins without the need to replace existing legacy systems.

Eli Lilly and Company Announces Multi-Million Dollar Facility for Next Gen Weight Loss

Eli Lilly and Company has announced a $3.5 billion investment to build a new injectable medicine and device manufacturing facility in Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania. This site, the tenth U.S. manufacturing facility announced by the company since 2020, will focus on producing next-generation weight-loss therapies, specifically the investigational triple hormone receptor agonist retatrutide. The project is expected to create 850 high-value permanent roles and 2,000 construction jobs, with operations slated to begin in 2031. To ensure a resilient and modern supply chain, Lilly plans to integrate advanced technologies such as AI, machine learning, and real-time data analytics. This expansion not only bolsters domestic production of essential medicines but is also expected to drive significant local economic activity, further strengthening the regional life sciences infrastructure.

U.S. Administration Announces “Project Vault,” a $12 Billion Initiative to Establish a Critical Minerals Reserve

The administration has launched “Project Vault,” a $12 billion initiative to establish a U.S. Strategic Critical Minerals Reserve aimed at reducing dependence on foreign supply chains for essential materials. This public-private partnership is backed by a $10 billion loan from the U.S. Export-Import Bank and $2 billion in private sector financing, with initial participation from major OEMs like General Motors, Boeing, and Western Digital. Designed to protect industries such as defense, energy, and automotive from supply shocks, the reserve functions similarly to the strategic petroleum reserve by stockpiling minerals vital for national security and economic stability. For supply chain managers, this project represents a long-term effort to stabilize the domestic industrial base and mitigate risks associated with foreign-controlled materials, supported by ongoing federal efforts to bolster mining and processing operations within the U.S.

Judge Lifts Ban on Another North East Offshore Wind Project

A federal judge on Monday allowed the 924-megawatt Sunrise Wind project, located off the east coast of New York, to resume construction after it was halted by a sweeping stop-work order issued by the Trump Administration in December. The project, which is nearly halfway complete, was expected to begin producing electricity this year before the order. The December order had cited “ambiguous national security concerns” as the reason for stopping Sunrise Wind and other offshore wind farms. However, Judge Royce Lamberth of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia reviewed the classified report detailing those threats and found the justification insufficient. He granted project developer Ørsted a preliminary injunction, allowing work to proceed while the legal complaint is processed.

Song of the week:

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Crusoe and Redwood Materials Expand Strategic Partnership

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Crusoe And Redwood Materials Expand Strategic Partnership

On March 24, 2026, Crusoe, an AI infrastructure company, and Redwood Materials, a leader in battery recycling and energy storage, announced a major expansion of their existing partnership.

The move scales their joint operations in Sparks, Nevada, to seven times the original AI infrastructure density, providing a blueprint for how second-life batteries can power high-performance computing.

From Pilot to Scale: 7x Growth

The expansion follows a successful pilot program launched in June 2025. Initially, the project utilized four Crusoe Spark™ modular data centers. Following seven months of high performance, the companies are increasing the deployment to 24 modular data centers.

This growth is made possible by the hardware’s “modular” nature. Unlike traditional data centers that require years of stationary construction, modular units can be manufactured off-site and deployed in months.

Powering AI with Second-Life Batteries

A central component of this partnership is the use of “second-life” electric vehicle (EV) batteries. When EV batteries are no longer optimal for automotive use, they often retain significant capacity for stationary energy storage.

Redwood Materials integrates these repurposed batteries into a 12-megawatt (MW) / 63-megawatt-hour (MWh) microgrid. This system, combined with on-site solar power, provides the energy required to run Crusoe’s AI-optimized GPUs. The orchestration of these batteries is handled by Redwood’s “Pack Manager” technology, which ensures steady power delivery for the intense workloads required by AI model training and inference.

Reliability and Performance Metrics

A primary concern with renewable-powered microgrids is “uptime”, the percentage of time the system is operational. The press release highlights several key performance indicators from the initial seven-month period:

99.2% Operational Availability: The microgrid exceeded reliability expectations while running on renewable sources and battery storage.

99.9% Total Uptime: By leveraging the traditional power grid as a backup source, Crusoe Cloud maintained a nearly constant state of operation.

Supply Chain and Sustainability

The partnership addresses two of the most significant bottlenecks in the current AI boom: energy consumption and deployment speed.

Sustainability: By using recycled materials and on-site renewable energy, the “AI factory” model reduces the carbon footprint associated with massive data processing.

Predictability: The ability to scale in months rather than years allows AI providers to meet the rapidly fluctuating demand for compute power.

As the demand for intelligence grows, the convergence of innovative energy storage and modular infrastructure—as demonstrated by Crusoe and Redwood Materials—offers a potential path forward for sustainable and rapid industrial scaling.

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Velotic Launches as Independent Industrial Software Company Integrating Proficy, Kepware, and ThingWorx

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Velotic Launches As Independent Industrial Software Company Integrating Proficy, Kepware, And Thingworx

Velotic announced its launch as an independent industrial software company, bringing together multiple established platforms to support evolving industrial and manufacturing requirements. The formation of Velotic coincides with the closing of TPG’s previously announced acquisitions of Proficy, the former manufacturing software business of GE Vernova, and PTC’s former industrial connectivity and Internet of Things (IoT) businesses.

Backed by TPG, Velotic provides a suite of data-driven solutions designed to help improve operational efficiency, enhance productivity, and increase visibility across complex industrial environments. The combined portfolio integrates Proficy’s automation and production management capabilities, Kepware’s industrial connectivity technologies, and ThingWorx’s industrial data and analytics applications.

According to Craig Resnick, Vice President, ARC Advisory Group, “The industrial software market is entering a pivotal moment. Manufacturers are under pressure to modernize operations, extract greater value from data, and rapidly adopt AI—without sacrificing reliability, safety, or control. Against this backdrop, the formation of Velotic as a new standalone industrial software company bringing together Proficy®, Kepware® and ThingWorx® represents more than a corporate restructuring. It signals a shift in how industrial data, analytics, and operations technology (OT) can be delivered at scale, that ARC strongly advocates.”

Velotic is positioned to help address increasing demand for integrated, AI-enabled industrial software by combining established technologies into a unified offering. The company focuses on helping to enable manufacturers to manage data more effectively and support operational decision-making across distributed environments.

Manufacturing software executive Brian Shepherd has been appointed CEO of Velotic. He brings over 25 years of experience in manufacturing technology, including leadership roles at Rockwell Automation, Hexagon Manufacturing Intelligence, and PTC. James Heppelmann, former Chairman and CEO of PTC, has been named Executive Chairman.

Velotic operates as a hardware-agnostic platform provider with a focus on flexibility and interoperability. Proficy, Kepware, and ThingWorx will continue as distinct product lines within the broader portfolio. The company is headquartered in the Boston area and reports more than $300 million in revenue, serving customers across manufacturing, oil and gas, utilities, and infrastructure sectors.

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Lytica and the Emergence of a Pricing Science Layer in Procurement

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Lytica And The Emergence Of A Pricing Science Layer In Procurement

A recent briefing with Lytica highlights a shift in procurement from opaque negotiation toward statistically grounded pricing intelligence.

Procurement has long operated with an imbalance of information.

Suppliers understand pricing across customers, volumes, and market conditions. Buyers rely on internal history, limited benchmarks, and negotiation experience to determine whether a price is competitive. In categories such as electronic components, this gap is amplified by volatility and limited transparency.

The result is consistent. Different companies, and often different divisions within the same company, pay materially different prices for the same component.

Lytica is attempting to address that condition.

From Transaction Data to Market Intelligence

Lytica’s platform is built on anonymized buyer transaction data aggregated across a network of companies. This creates a continuously updated view of pricing across suppliers, regions, and time.

This is not modeled data or survey input. It reflects observed market behavior.

That distinction allows procurement teams to assess pricing against a broader market reference:

Where are we overpaying

How do suppliers price across customers

What does competitive pricing look like

This represents a move from internal spend analysis to external market intelligence.

From Benchmarking to a Pricing Discipline

The more important development is how this data is modeled.

Lytica treats pricing as a measure of competitiveness rather than a fixed value. Prices exist within a distribution shaped by real transactions. Each company occupies a position within that distribution.

This enables a more structured evaluation of procurement performance:

Prices can be ranked relative to the market

Outliers can be identified and examined

Expected price ranges can be estimated using observed data

The question shifts from “Is this price good” to “How competitive is this price relative to the market”

This introduces a more disciplined approach to procurement performance.

Quantifying Leverage in Negotiation

Once pricing is modeled this way, negotiation becomes more structured.

Procurement teams can enter discussions with:

Target pricing ranges based on transaction data

Evidence of variance across comparable buyers

Supplier-specific pricing patterns over time

This replaces qualitative positioning with data-backed arguments.

The result is more consistent outcomes and shorter negotiation cycles.

From Data to Decision Support

The next step is applying this dataset in operational workflows.

As outlined in modern supply chain architectures , AI systems become more useful when grounded in domain-specific data and applied with context.

In this case, systems can:

Identify deviations from competitive pricing levels

Estimate expected pricing ranges based on observed transactions

Generate supplier-specific negotiation guidance

Monitor pricing performance over time

These outputs are typically delivered as structured guidance for sourcing teams.

The Role of Context and Retrieval

The effectiveness of this approach depends on how data is accessed and retained.

Retrieval-based architectures allow systems to reference current transaction data when generating recommendations. Context-aware systems retain supplier history, pricing behavior, and prior outcomes across decision cycles.

This supports continuity in decision making rather than isolated analysis.

Positioning in the Stack

Lytica does not replace ERP or sourcing platforms. It operates as an intelligence layer above them.

This reflects a broader shift:

Systems of record manage transactions

Systems of execution manage workflows

Systems of intelligence guide decisions

Over time, as confidence in recommendations increases, this layer is likely to become more integrated into execution.

The Bottom Line

Lytica reflects a shift in procurement.

Pricing is moving from opaque negotiation toward structured, data-based market positioning.

This changes how procurement operates:

From internal benchmarks to external reference points

From periodic sourcing to continuous evaluation

From intuition to structured decision support

In more volatile supply environments, this type of capability becomes increasingly relevant.

Organizations that adopt it early will have a clearer understanding of their market position and a more consistent approach to improving it.

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