360° MOBILITY Mega Shows opened today at Taipei Nangang Exhibition Center, bringing together industry leaders, buyers, media and visitors from Taiwan and abroad. The event opened with strong traffic across the show floor, as exhibitors and attendees engaged in active networking, product demonstrations and business discussions.

This year’s edition features nearly 900 exhibitors from 16 countries and regions, with displays spanning automotive and motorcycle components, electric vehicles, autonomous driving systems, hydrogen applications and smart mobility solutions. On opening day, the AI CAR Pavilion and Hydrogen Applications Pavilion were among the main focal points, drawing sustained attention from buyers and industry professionals. The strong interest in both areas underscored Taiwan’s capabilities in vehicle electronics integration, supply-chain collaboration and emerging energy applications.
The exhibition is organized around a series of themed zones, including AI CAR, Electric Vehicles, Connected Vehicles, Hydrogen Applications, the ESG Pavilion and the Automotive Components Alliance, alongside international participation such as the U.S. Pavilion and Czech Pavilion. Together, these sections reflect the industry’s transition toward electrification, connectivity, low-carbon technologies, component
upgrading and cross-border cooperation, offering a broad view of developments across complete vehicles, systems, components and next-generation energy solutions.

Major exhibitors span five core segments of the mobility value chain: complete vehicles and future mobility, electrification and new energy, components and aftermarket services, ICT and semiconductors, and smart cockpit and autonomous driving technologies. Participating companies include Foxconn, China Motor Corporation, Škoda, Fortune Electric, TECO, Pegatron, Advantech, E-Lead Electronic and MiTAC.
Among the notable exhibits, a Taiwan-developed hydrogen bus certified to EU and UN standards is being presented at scale in Taiwan for the first time, while Lean Mobility, a Taiwan-Japan joint venture, is showcasing an electric three-wheeler. Both exhibits add momentum to the show’s emphasis on future mobility and next- generation propulsion technologies.

The automotive and motorcycle parts section also brings together suppliers specializing in vehicle lighting, critical components and aftermarket maintenance solutions, highlighting the depth of Taiwan’s manufacturing base and supply-chain strength. The participation of leading component makers further reinforces Taiwan’s competitive position in the global automotive parts and aftermarket sectors.
In addition to the exhibition itself, the event features a series of forums and business-matching programs aimed at fostering industry dialogue and international cooperation. These include the 360° Mobility Forum, as well as procurement meetings designed to connect exhibitors with global buyers and partners. Together, these programs are intended to support deeper exchange on mobility technology, supply-chain strategy, and market development. This year’s show is built around three core themes — Connected Mobility, Future Mobility and Green Mobility — bringing together advances in AI-enabled driving technologies, hydrogen applications, vehicle electronics, intelligent transportation and sustainable mobility. The exhibition runs through April 17, with trade visitors admitted via pre-registration and public visitors also able to attend.




