SAES has taken part in the 3rd Industrial Forum on Innovation in the Maritime Sector, sharing its perspective on the strategic role of dual‑use technologies in the transformation of maritime security and the protection of critical infrastructure, with a particular focus on the underwater domain.
The 3rd Industrial Forum on Innovation in the Maritime Sector 2026, organised by Interempresas, with SOERMAR as strategic partner and Navalia Exhibition as main sponsor, was held in Madrid as a key meeting point for the naval, logistics, technology and defence sectors. Under the theme “Dual‑Use Technologies for European Strategic Autonomy”, the event brought together institutional representatives, European authorities, the Spanish Navy and leading industry players to discuss the main challenges and opportunities shaping the future of the maritime sector.
Key topics addressed during the forum included energy transition, digitalisation, automation and the development of dual‑use technologies applied to the maritime environment, as well as the role of European industrial policy and EU funding in strengthening the sector’s competitiveness.
SAES participated in the panel discussion “Dual‑use technologies and maritime security”, moderated by Vice Admiral Manuel A. Martínez Ruiz, alongside Indra, Escribano Mechanical & Engineering and Astilleros Armón. During the session, Ignacio Gutiérrez Suanzes, Business Development director at SAES, emphasised that “maritime security can no longer rely solely on vessels and occasional deployments, but must be based on persistent, scalable and sustainable capabilities over time.” In this context, dual‑use technologies emerge as an effective means of moving from episodic solutions to continuous surveillance capabilities in peacetime.
Ignacio Gutiérrez also highlighted the ongoing paradigm shift in the underwater domain: the transition from isolated sensors to distributed acoustic networks, the use of edge processing to reduce latency, and the integration of unmanned platforms as true capability multipliers. “The value lies not only in the drone itself, but in equipping it with sensing, autonomy and communication capabilities in an environment as demanding as the underwater domain,” he noted.
Finally, SAES underlined the key role of Spanish industry —and of private shipyards as technology integrators— in the development of real operational capabilities aligned with European programmes, as well as the clear opportunity for leadership in areas such as underwater protection, acoustic surveillance and the security of critical maritime infrastructure.



















