FPS adds Southern Fabrication Works to portfolio

FPS adds Southern Fabrication Works to portfolio

FPS has acquired Southern Fabrication Works to widen potato systems. The addition brings hydro-cutting and water-knife technology into FPS’s equipment offering.


IN Brief:

  • FPS has added Southern Fabrication Works to its global equipment group.
  • The deal strengthens cutting, water management, and waste-handling capability.
  • Potato processing remains the near-term focus for the combined engineering offer.

FPS Food Process Solutions has acquired Southern Fabrication Works (SFW), adding a specialist equipment manufacturer known for custom industrial food processing systems, with an established base in potato processing applications.

The acquisition expands FPS’s in-house capability in hydro-cutting and water-knife technology, alongside water recycling, waste-handling systems, and plant engineering support. Those functions are tightly coupled in potato processing, where product shaping, cut quality, and defect reduction are often bound up with high-flow water systems and the associated treatment and recirculation infrastructure.

FPS has built a global business around turnkey processing lines, including freezing and cooling equipment, and has used acquisitions and partnerships to broaden its portfolio across the process chain. Folding SFW into the group strengthens FPS’s position in the front-end and mid-line stages of potato processing, where precision cutting and water management performance can dictate yield, consistency, and downstream load on blanching, drying, frying, and freezing steps.

SFW’s offering has been described as integrated, high-precision system design supported by detailed engineering and project execution, which maps to FPS’s strategy of supplying complete lines rather than standalone modules. FPS and SFW have also pointed to the value of adding design and build depth around water usage and waste streams, which can influence both operating cost and the footprint of ancillary systems required to keep lines running at target throughputs.

Commenting on the deal, SFW’s Neil Justesen said the company was “excited to partner” with FPS. FPS president Jeffrey Chang said the company aimed to provide “full end-to-end solutions” and described the timing as right to join forces.

The combined business now has an expanded toolkit for line design where cutting, water handling, and effluent management need to be engineered as a single system, particularly in plants pursuing higher automation levels and tighter process control. As integration progresses, attention will focus on how quickly SFW’s cutting and water system capability is standardised across FPS line designs for potato and adjacent applications.


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