Fire Safety Event Asia 2025: Aligning safety across Asia
Isabelle Crow
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The Fire Safety Event Asia 2025 launches in Singapore with exhibition, CPD education and networking designed for fire professionals, regulators, integrators and asset managers
November will see the launch of The Fire Safety Event Asia (FSEA), the first APAC edition of the UK’s well-established Fire Safety Event, opening at Marina Bay Sands in Singapore.
Running from 11 to 13 November 2025 at the Sands Expo & Convention Centre, the show positions itself as a new hub for fire protection, prevention and life-safety across the region.
The event is organised by Nineteen APAC Pte Ltd, part of Nineteen Group.
By combining a dedicated exhibition with CPD-recognised education and built-in networking, the organisers are aiming to create a focal point for fire professionals across Asia.
Co-located with three other events, FSEA will sit alongside The Security Event Asia, The Health & Safety Event Asia and Pro Integration Future Asia.
Visitors can register once and move freely between halls, but for fire specialists the Singapore launch marks the arrival of a dedicated marketplace where regional priorities can be discussed directly with global suppliers and standards bodies.
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ToggleWho it’s for and why it matters
The organiser describes FSEA as “the premier destination for fire safety professionals,” and the visitor profile reflects that ambition. Installers and system integrators, consultants, specifiers, facilities managers and asset owners are all expected to attend.
Messaging emphasises technically focused buyers who are already engaged in scoping, selecting and maintaining systems.
For exhibitors, this audience signals an environment where product demonstrations are likely to translate directly into procurement conversations.
The organiser’s visitor information highlights clear areas of interest, including fire alarm systems, detection and servicing tools, emergency lighting, evacuation equipment, fire-resistant cabling, sprinklers, gaseous suppression, passive fire protection, public address and voice alarm systems and smart building integration.
End-user brands confirmed to attend include Panasonic, Johnson Controls, Shell Corporation, Honda, Capitaland, United Technologies, Victoria State Government and Petronas, indicating that major industrial and technology operators see value in being present.
For fire professionals in the region, the opportunity to meet this range of stakeholders in a single venue is a strong incentive to attend.
The organiser has projected more than 3,000 visitors from fire-safety related industries, 75 suppliers and manufacturers, and over 10,000 products and solutions on the fire floor.
While this is modest compared with long-running European shows, it signals an intent to establish a focused, technically driven event rather than a broad trade fair.
What to expect on the show floor
The exhibition covers both active and passive fire protection, with suppliers presenting detection and alarm systems, evacuation products, coatings, suppression equipment and compliance tools.
Examples from the organiser’s materials highlight the range. Sistem Teknik (Stand 1518) will display fire-test furnaces and a Steiner Tunnel rig, equipment that speaks directly to those involved in testing and certification.
Fieldmagic (Stand 1614) will show its compliance and service software, offering fire-protection service providers tools for inspection scheduling, mobile testing and asset management.
Fire Isolator content suggests a focus on electric vehicle fire response, with demonstrations of blanket deployment and water-mist lance techniques.
Hempel (Singapore) Pte Ltd (Stand 1712) is noted as an exhibitor in passive fire protection coatings, while other suppliers span system integration, testing equipment and connected safety platforms.
For visitors, the mix offers a chance to compare established fire products with newer digital service solutions in the same hall.
A new addition for 2025 is the Skills for Security partnership, bringing WorldSkills Asia qualifiers into the fire hall.
This will showcase apprentice-level testing and highlight the pipeline of future fire engineers, raising competency standards in the sector.
Conference and summits
At the heart of the education programme is the Fire Safety Leaders Summit, running across all three days. Sessions are free to attend and carry CPD recognition, ensuring that delegates can record accredited learning time.
The agenda reflects pressing regional concerns: regulatory consistency, competency and training, high-rise and urban risk, data-driven fire management and lithium-ion hazards.
Day One opens with “Strengthening Fire Safety Enforcement in Asia: Bridging Gaps, Building Resilience” at 10:00, a session mapping enforcement frameworks across the region and highlighting opportunities for alignment.
Later in the day, Hong Kong’s Electrical and Mechanical Services Department will share experience with connected emergency lighting systems, while other sessions explore safer cities through connected sensors, predictive use of inspection data, and evacuation challenges in tall buildings.
Day Two includes a technical focus on passive fire protection training, a discussion on warehouse fire safety in Asia’s logistics sector, and a panel on regulatory trends across the region.
Speakers such as Paolo Cazzaniga and Sammy Yasushi Somekawa of Kiyohara & Co. Ltd will address component integrity in protective equipment, reflecting a wider interest in product assurance and certification.
Day Three brings Fire Industry Association (FIA) keynote sessions, including Ian Moore, Christ Tilley and Robert Thilthorpe from FIA on the future of standards and practice in Asia, alongside sessions on competence-led training, lithium-ion fire hazards and workforce simulation.
These FIA contributions connect the Singapore launch with the established UK model, underlining the event’s emphasis on standards and education, alongside its pavilion of member exhibitors on the show floor.
Networking and awards
Networking is built into the event format. A dedicated lounge is situated within The Security Event Asia, and organisers have programmed complimentary drinks receptions on the first two days, running from 16:30 to 17:30, to encourage peer exchanges.
By positioning the networking within the show floor rather than off-site, the intention is to keep conversations tied closely to the products and sessions delegates have just seen.
The second evening also links directly to the Merlion Awards 2025, which recognise companies and products demonstrating performance, service excellence and innovation across fire, security and safety.
Entries are judged on criteria such as effectiveness, sustainability, design and market potential, with shortlists revealed during the show.
For exhibitors, the awards provide a platform to highlight technical solutions; for visitors, they act as a filter on where the organisers believe innovation and compliance strength are being demonstrated.
Why fire professionals should attend
For building owners and asset managers, FSEA provides an efficient way to benchmark suppliers of passive fire protection, detection and evacuation systems while hearing directly from regulators on enforcement frameworks.
For system integrators and service providers, the combination of testing equipment, compliance software and maintenance-focused sessions connects product demonstrations with operational workflows.
Industrial and logistics operators will find specific content on warehouse fire safety and lithium-ion hazards, while consultants and authorities can draw on FIA keynotes and regulatory harmonisation sessions to track regional policy.
By embedding CPD recognition, structured networking and a dedicated fire hall within a wider SSA format, the organisers have created a launch edition that seeks to balance technical focus with cross-sector reach.
For fire professionals across APAC, it offers a chance to see new products, collect accredited learning, and contribute to standards discussions at a time when regulatory alignment and competency are under scrutiny.