Global technology giant Emerson (NYSE: EMR) said Tuesday it would “seamlessly integrate” its entire industrial automation stack for customers under a new software-defined enterprise operations platform.
The move follows the completion of Emerson’s takeover of industrial software solutions provider AspenTech in January in a deal valued at $7.2 billion. The seeds of the takeover were planted in 2022, after Emerson initially completed a majority investment stake in AspenTech with an initial stock holding of 55%.
But in less than three years, the global giant upped the stakes to buy AspenTech outright, delisting it from the NASDAQ in the process.
Launching the enterprise operations platform – named ‘Project Beyond’ – at Emerson Exchange 2025, the company’s week-long leadership and customer conference in San Antonio, Texas, U.S., it noted the offering would be “the industry’s first software-defined, operational technology-ready digital platform” that will deploy and manage its suite of new artificial intelligence applications and models.
“Project Beyond combines industrial AI with contextualized data across a diverse set of automation environments – embedded, edge and cloud – to unlock flexibility, safety, sustainability and performance,” it added.
Emerson’s move comes at a time of rising demand for increased software-defined capability and hardware-based AI accelerators, as the global energy, industrial and manufacturing complex strives for increased throughput and lower carbon emissions.
The company claimed the speed of technology and industrial AI advancements, combined with increased computing power needs and the unprecedented volume and complexity of siloed data generated across industrial assets, requires a new, cost-efficient way for companies to leverage automation across the enterprise while protecting existing investments.
The platform will “tackle this challenge” by creating a “flexible, scalable and secure” basis to connect customers’ existing automation installed base with modern technologies to empower continuous, enterprise-wide visibility, optimization and, eventually, autonomous operations.
Emerson did not provide financial targets for the platform at the launch but noted that “Project Beyond will provide customers with a consistent platform to deploy and manage new AI applications and models, along with contextualized data.”
It believes both existing and potential customers in industries such as energy, power, life sciences, chemicals and mining will be receptive to its move.
“Companies are eager to modernize automation and keep pace with the promise of new technologies like AI without ripping and replacing their existing infrastructure or dealing with the pain and costs of integrating new applications and millions of fragmented data points,” said Ram Krishnan, chief operating officer at Emerson.
“Project Beyond will use the power of software-defined control to introduce an entirely new, scalable, seamlessly integrated infrastructure with automated data contextualization to turn trapped data into powerful operational efficiencies.”
The six building blocks of Project Beyond include – computing power, networking and connectivity, data operations, app marketplace, AI orchestration and a zero-trust security architecture for industries.
In many ways, Emerson’s acquisition of AspenTech paved the way for what has since followed in the shape of its latest product launch.
“By combining Emerson’s industrial automation capabilities with AspenTech’s deep software expertise – from modeling and optimization to machine learning and AI – we’re embedding artificial intelligence into our systems, turning information into insights that will help our customers along their journey toward optimized autonomous operations,” Krishnan concluded.