Brambati to unveil energy-efficient roaster and mill at Interpack 2026
Brambati will bring a new fully automatic roaster and roller mill to Interpack, betting on automation and lower energy use as large roasters chase tighter consistency.

Industrial coffee is heading toward tighter control, lower waste and more automation, and Brambati will put that shift on display in Hall 3 at Interpack 2026 in Düsseldorf. The Italian engineering company plans to show the BR 2400, a next-generation fully automatic roaster built for high performance, precision and energy efficiency, alongside a fully automatic roller mill designed to keep particle size uniform and downstream processing steadier.
Interpack runs from May 7 to May 13 at Messe Düsseldorf and is billed as the world’s leading packaging and processing trade fair. For 2026, the event is centered on AI, automation, innovative materials and new skills, which makes Brambati’s lineup feel less like a standalone product launch and more like a snapshot of where industrial coffee plants are headed next.
Brambati has spent decades in that lane. The company says it has been active in food plant engineering since 1945, while its history page traces the business back to Francesco Brambati’s milling machinery work in 1928. Today, Brambati says it designs, builds and installs plants for the food, coffee and plastic industries, and its coffee systems are turnkey lines that can cover green coffee reception, cleaning, storage, weighing, blending, roasting, conveying, grinding and degassing.
That breadth matters because the pressure on large roasters is no longer just throughput. It is repeatability, labor efficiency and energy use across an entire line. Brambati’s Food Lab materials say the company is working on roasting, dosing, mixing, milling and inerting with flexible, adaptive automation, while also focusing on reduced emissions and lower energy consumption under a Green & Safe approach. In practical terms, that can affect everything from how many operators a plant needs to how consistently a roast profile holds when volume rises.

The company has been signaling that direction for some time. In July 2025, Brambati announced an AI-based project aimed at optimizing coffee roasting through intelligent data analysis. A 2019 company post described the BR 6000 as a 600 kg-batch roaster and pointed to remote roasting tests, underscoring how long Brambati has been moving toward digital control, recipe management and real-time comparison of roast curves.
Brambati also says it has offices in the United States and Asia, which gives this Interpack appearance a wider commercial reach than a simple European trade fair stop. For roasters watching machinery costs, energy bills and product consistency, the signal from Düsseldorf is clear: the next race is not just for bigger machines, but for lines that can hold quality, flex with demand and do it with less power.
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