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ISLAMABAD, Feb 04 (APP): The National Centre for Physics (NCP) concluded its first-ever Industrial Expo 2026, a landmark event that highlighted Pakistan’s growing ability to transform scientific research into industrial solutions and strengthen its knowledge-driven economy.
The two-day Expo, inaugurated on Wednesday, attracted policymakers, entrepreneurs, industrialists, academics, researchers, and young innovators. It showcased NCP’s achievements in applied science, commercialization, and entrepreneurship, reflecting the institution’s evolution from a pure research body into a multidisciplinary hub of innovation.
Among the successes presented were advanced physics instrumentation, detector development, and materials synthesis, alongside specialised training in computational physics.
NCP’s IT Directorate and Centres of Excellence unveiled prototypes and products tailored for industry and startups, including artificial intelligence systems for health management, drone-based yield estimation, cloud seeding technologies, cybersecurity solutions, and wire bonding facilities for electronics manufacturing.
The exhibition also featured breakthroughs in 3D printing and vacuum science, offering ready-for-industry solutions developed through years of research.
These technologies are now available for adoption, positioning Pakistan to commercialize and export homegrown innovations.
These innovations reflect NCP’s evolution from a pure research institution into a multidisciplinary hub of applied science, commercialisation, and entrepreneurship, a spectrum which emerged from Physics now has distinct flavours of Artificial Intelligence, Additive manufacturing, Vacuum sciences, well netted by Info Tech.
At the closing session, NCP Director General Dr. Qaisar Ahsan hailed the Expo as a milestone in building stronger industry–academia linkages. He said the platform united government, industry, academia, and youth—the pillars of Pakistan’s innovation ecosystem—and emphasised that collaboration is the cornerstone of sustainable growth and technological self-reliance.
The Islamabad Chamber of Commerce and Industry played a key role in facilitating B2B matchmaking and networking sessions.
ICCI President Sardar Tahir Mehmood said the Expo enabled live demonstrations, technical discussions, joint project planning, and exploration of long-term partnerships, stressing that economic progress depends on effective collaboration between research, entrepreneurship, and industrial application.
The Expo gave industries, students, professionals, and the public a rare opportunity to witness Pakistan’s tech-driven research in action, connect with cutting-edge technologies, and explore the future of innovation at the National Centre for Physics.