The Netherlands plays a pivotal role in the global manufacturing and agricultural landscape. Not only are we one of the most technologically advanced economies in Europe, but we act as the central engine for European food innovation (Invest in Holland, 2026). The Netherlands is a global powerhouse in the agri-food sector, maintaining its position as the second-largest exporter of agricultural products in the world, with exports reaching well over €120 billion annually (Statistics Netherlands [CBS], 2026).
Just looking at the top players in our market, cooperatives and multinationals generating tens of billions in annual turnover, the scale of production is immense. Yet, beneath the surface of our world-class dairy plants, meat processing facilities, and commercial bakeries, a silent margin-killer is at work: unplanned downtime.
In food manufacturing, a stopped line is a ticking clock. According to recent industry benchmarking data, an hour of unplanned stoppage costs fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) and food manufacturers an average of €115.000 per hour, with some high-volume lines losing up to €240.000 per hour when production halts (Cryotos CMMS, 2026).
But direct production loss is just the beginning. When a refrigeration unit fails or a mixing line halts, you aren't just losing time, you are often forced to scrap highly perishable raw materials (Oxmaint, 2026). Add in the regulatory exposure of broken cold chains, commercial penalties for missed supermarket delivery windows (fill-rate penalties), and emergency repair premiums, and the true cost of an emergency repair is often 4 to 5 times more expensive than a planned maintenance intervention on the exact same asset (Aberdeen Strategy & Research, 2026).
Despite these staggering financial hits, a shocking number of top-tier FMCG and agri-food facilities still operate reactively. Why?
When I sit down with C-level executives and Plant Managers at some of the biggest food production companies in the Netherlands, I often hear the same thing:
"We have a CMMS, and we stick to our preventative maintenance schedules. It’s good enough."
But in today's landscape, "good enough" is eroding your competitive edge, primarily due to the severe, structural labor crisis in the Netherlands. Labor shortages remain one of the top operational constraints for Dutch companies, severely hindering productivity growth and daily operations (, Statistics Netherlands [CBS], 2026).
There simply aren't enough qualified maintenance engineers in the Netherlands to execute traditional calendar-based inspections, let alone run from fire to fire when critical equipment breaks down. Furthermore, the frequent wash-downs, harsh sanitation chemicals, and extreme temperature changes unique to food processing cause equipment to degrade in unpredictable ways that a standard calendar cannot foresee.
If your data is only telling you what has already broken or what needs to be checked this month, you are missing the biggest opportunity in modern manufacturing: Predictive Maintenance.
We have the data. From advanced PLCs on packaging lines to industrial IoT sensors monitoring motor vibrations, Dutch food factories are already generating terabytes of operational data. The problem is that this data is siloed on the factory floor (OT), disconnected from boardroom strategy (IT).
The smartest players in the food sector are transitioning from reactive models to true AI-driven Predictive Maintenance. Here is what that looks like in practice:
At SDG Group, we know that successful predictive maintenance in the food industry isn't about installing a complex AI dashboard and hoping for the best. It requires a pragmatic, scalable data strategy that works in harsh, hygiene-sensitive environments.
We help food manufacturing leaders build robust data foundations. We focus on:
In the Dutch food industry, pragmatic action beats AI buzzwords. At SDG Group, we start by bringing our data engineers directly to the table alongside your maintenance and IT teams for a hands-on workshop. Together, we skip the high-level theories and use a focused session to identify your critical assets, locate your data silos, and build a concrete roadmap to predictive maintenance that actually works in practice.
Stop paying the premium for unplanned downtime, send me a message to schedule a call and let's map out your transition from reactive to predictive.
Douwe Bruinsma is a Business Development Manager at SDG Group (an ALTEN company).
He focuses on the manufacturing and agri-food sectors in the Netherlands, bringing a strong track record of partnering with industry leaders like ISOhorti and Royal GD.
Want to bridge the gap between OT and IT? Connect with Douwe on LinkedIn.