Adrian Grancea, COO at Highberg Solution, will be a key speaker at re:FOCUS 2025

Adrian Grancea, COO at Highberg Solution, will be a key speaker at the highly anticipated re:FOCUS on Retail, eCommerce, Couriers & Logistics 2025 powered by Business Review, the first event of the year dedicated to Online and Offline Retailers, Couriers, and Transport & Logistics, that will take place at Courtyard by Marriott Bucharest Floreasca on the 29th of January.

Mr. Grancea is an experienced Project Manager with a demonstrated history of working in the renewables and environment industry and up to the current position at Highberg Solution, a manufacturer of liquid and powder storage tanks with more than 15 years of activity, he held various positions in companies such as Aeon Building, Biogest Energie und Wassertechnik Gmbh, Romcab and Lafarge Cement.

At re:FOCUS on Retail, eCommerce, Couriers & Logistics 2025 he will be present in the third and last panel of the event, the one dedicated to Industrial & Logistics Developments, where he will bring his contribution on such topics as the main opportunities and challenges for 2025 in the field, but also on ESG Compliance in Industrial Developments, more specifically incorporating sustainability in industrial and logistics facility design.

However, Mr. Grancea will also address the whole spectre of activities that the company he represents is involved in. To put it in his own words, that he shared in an exclusive interview for Business Review last year: “The company mainly operates in one of the two existing segments, namely private capital investment, with a smaller part of public and European money in the area of water supply and sewerage infrastructure in villages and towns. What keeps us on the edge of activation in the second segment has been and will remain the way this market has been built and segregated over time, defined by the well-known criterion of the lowest price, which generates a total lack of vision on the costs of operating and maintaining these storage reservoirs. Clearly, on such a precarious market, competition does not represent any sustainable economic value, as this is merely a vortex of public money for the other 14-15 companies in this segment”.