03 February 2026
Article written by Stefan Koch, Global Lead of the Metals, Mill Products and Mining Industry Business Unit at SAP SE. From the Asia-Pacific region, India and Africa to Europe […]
Article written by Stefan Koch, Global Lead of the Metals, Mill Products and Mining Industry Business Unit at SAP SE.
From the Asia-Pacific region, India and Africa to Europe and the Americas, signs point to massive growth opportunities for wire and cable manufacturers in 2026 and beyond.
Hyperscalers and other entities are building data centers at an unprecedented pace. Telecom companies are aggressively upgrading and expanding their networks and services. Amazon is girding to lay a new subsea fibre-optic cable between the U.S. and the U.K. Energy and utility companies are investing huge amounts in electric grid expansion and modernization to connect to new renewable sources and support growing demand for electric vehicles and EV charging infrastructure. EV manufacturers are packing miles of cable and wire into their cars.
And in the middle of it all are wire and cable manufacturers. “From the cables running deep beneath the ocean to those inside the walls of every new server hall, the wire and cable industry is becoming the unseen foundation of the global digital economy,” the IWMA recently observed “With AI, electrification, and clean energy all converging, this sector will play a central role not just in enabling digital growth, but in making it sustainable.”
To thrive in that role, manufacturers have to be sure they’re ready operationally and competitively. To that end, here are five areas they should be focusing on in 2026 and beyond:
By focusing on improving products so they can better withstand the conditions in which they will be deployed, and so they provide greater efficiency and throughput, manufacturers put themselves in a strong position to make inroads in new and existing markets. Here’s another area where intelligent design and modeling capabilities, along with advanced quality-control capabilities, are essential.
With these benefits in mind, companies could offer smart cables integrated with sensors and communication technologies and packaged with real-time monitoring and predictive maintenance, for example. They could develop a service that alerts customers in advance to potential weather or dangerous conditions, so measures can be taken to protect their infrastructure and the surrounding area. Or, how about offering a wire and cable recycling and recovery service similar to the one launched by Nexans in 2024?
One way to make services like these more compelling to customers is to infuse them with
generative AI-driven copilots and AI agents. Another is to ensure they come with strong data security measures, such as by housing data associated with a service in a sovereign cloud.
Because service offerings like these will in many cases involve capabilities that aren’t in a manufacturer’s wheelhouse (AI capabilities, weather forecasting, analytics), developing them may require a manufacturer to build business ecosystems with partner companies whose expertise complements their own.
The signs of a cable and wire boom are everywhere. Cabling demand for data centers is expected to nearly triple between 2024 and 2029, according to CRU. Meanwhile, in India alone, the power cable market is projected to grow at a 12% annual clip for copper and 10% for aluminium between 2025 and 2029. Demand for fibre optic cable is also expected to continue surging. Manufacturers that focus on the aforementioned five areas should be well-positioned to ready to meet the moment—and the operational and competitive challenges it brings.
Editor’s Note
The following article has been submitted by an external industry contributor. It is authored by a representative of SAP, a global enterprise software provider whose technologies support manufacturing, supply-chain management and digital transformation across industrial sectors. The article offers a broad, forward-looking perspective on the opportunities and challenges facing wire and cable manufacturers as global demand surges across data centres, energy infrastructure, electrification and fibre development. While the views expressed are those of the author, we believe the insights will be of value to our readers as the sector prepares for another period of significant growth and transformation.