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    Kevin Parmenter, Pins Out Engineering, for TSC America, Inc.

    The Industrial Electronics Market: Present State and Emerging Needs

    03/19/2026
    Kevin Parmenter, Pins Out Engineering, for TSC America, Inc.

    ­The industrial electronics market is undergoing a period of steady growth and transformation, driven by “Industry 4.0,” and the overall need for more resilient, efficient systems. The global market value was $187.3 billion in 2024 and is projected to reach $342.6 billion by 2032 (a CAGR of 7.9%).

    Unlike consumer and computing electronics, industrial applications demand long lifecycles, high reliability, and predictable performance under harsh conditions. These requirements place pressure on manufacturers, system integrators and component suppliers.

    The core of today’s industrial electronics market is the push toward greater automation and connectivity. Manufacturing, energy and other areas are deploying more sensors, controllers, and intelligent edge devices to improve efficiency, visibility and up time. This trend accelerates the adoption of industrial IoT (Iao), where data collection and real-time control are becoming standard requirements rather than differentiators.

    Reliability and safety remain non-negotiable requirements for industrial systems that operate continuously for 10-20 years, often in electrically noisy and extreme environments. Protecting them from cyber threats and ensuring safe operation under fault conditions is also essential. Compliance with standards in this area, plus EMI/RFI and global safety certifications, is expected.

    Another requirement is flexibility. OEMs seek modular platforms adaptable across multiple products or customer configurations with minimal redesign – and no NRE. This increases demand for configurable power solutions, software-defined control architectures, and design partners capable of rapid customization without sacrificing certifications or reliability. Supply continuity is equally critical; recent global supply chain disruptions reinforce the importance of multi-sourcing, long-term availability commitments and transparent lifecycle management.

    Power electronics play a foundational role in the industrial market’s evolution as customers require applications with higher efficiency, higher power density and improved thermal performance. For instance, AC-DC and DC-DC power supply applications face regulatory pressure around energy efficiency, spurring system designers to reduce cabinet size and eliminate fans to simplify cooling and increase reliability. This leads them to employ advanced power topologies, improved magnetics and wide-bandgap semiconductors like GaN and SiC.

    Looking forward, the industrial electronics market will continue to reward suppliers who combine deep technical expertise and innovation with operational discipline. Customers value robust design margins, conservative component selection, proven EMI suppression techniques, safety and even altitude ratings. Qualification of industrial parts usually means providing AEC-Q-level reliability, MTBF-FIT and PPAP documentation, since automotive and the industrial customers want the same things. Companies delivering adaptable solutions while supporting long lifecycles and stable supply will be best positioned to meet the evolving needs of industrial customers in an increasingly connected world. It’s not just a market, it’s a commitment.

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