Fimma Brazil 2025 opened its doors today
With more than 300 exhibitors and a strong commitment to innovation and sustainability, Fimma Brazil 2025 today opened its doors in Bento Gonçalves. The fair, one of the most important events for the wood and furniture industry in Latin America, will run until August 7 and promises to generate businesses for more than R $ 1.7 billion.
The 17th International Fair of Suppliers of the Wood and Furniture Productive Chain (Fimma Brazil 2025) started today, Monday, August 4, 2025, in Bento Gonçalves, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, and will run until Thursday, August 7. It is taking place in the Bento Gonçalves event park, with a daily day from 10:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.Outstanding aspects of the eventIt has more than 300 national and international exhibitors, presenting machinery, raw materials, technologies and other supplies for the wood and furniture sector.They are planned about R $ 1.74 billion in businesses generated during the fair, which will attract about 15 thousand people.The edition includes the innovation square, an interactive space with free conferences, immersive experiences and an innovative proposal organized by Movegs together with institutions such as Sebrae RS, Inova RS, Senai -rs, and more.In addition, the fair has obtained the certification of neutral carbon event, operating with 100% renewable energy during assembly, development and disassembly.Essential informationDetails Emphas 4 to August 7, 2025 HORARIO10: 00 to 7:00 p.m.
IT MAY INTEREST YOU
Combilift Unveils the 2025 Christmas video “Twelve Days of Christmas” – with a Twist!
Monaghan, Ireland – November 2025
Missions | New illegal felling in the Piñalito Provincial Park in San Pedro reveals the silent expansion of deforestation in protected areas
The advance of deforestation on protected areas was once again evident this week in the Piñalito Sur Provincial Park, in San Pedro, where the Ministry of Ecology and Renewable Natural Resources confirmed a new case of selective illegal logging. The event occurs in a context of growing concern about the fragility of the environmental control system in rural and border areas, where the scarcity of resources, personnel and logistics limits the capacity of surveillance against criminal organizations organized to steal native woods and market them on the black market in connivance with sawmill owners.
Canadian researchers make biochar from wood waste that rivals steel in strength
Researchers at the University of Toronto have developed monolithic biochar from wood that can reach an axial hardness of up to 2.25 GPa, similar to mild steel.





















