Ala Nylons Forum 2021 May 2026
Unfortunately, the ALA does not publicly post full video recordings of breakout forums like Nylons due to proprietary business discussions. However, you can access:
For the 2024 and 2025 schedules, check the official American Logistics Association website under “Events” > “Industry Forums.”
Looking back, the ALA Nylons Forum 2021 was not just an annual meeting but a turning point. It pushed the regional industry to:
Many of the prototypes shown in 2021 reached commercial production by 2023. The electric vehicle nylon components first discussed here are now standard in Ford, GM, and Volkswagen EVs assembled in Mexico. ala nylons forum 2021
A crawl of the forum from mid-2021 would reveal these popular thread categories:
Notably absent in 2021: politics, general chat, or spam. The forum remained tightly focused.
The ALA (Advanced Lighting & Applications) Nylons Forum 2021 convened at a pivotal moment for the polyamide industry. Occurring amid post-pandemic supply chain volatility, rising feedstock costs, and accelerating regulatory pressure on carbon emissions, the forum served as a critical platform for producers, converters, and end-users to align on priorities. This paper synthesizes the most actionable insights from the event, focusing on: Unfortunately, the ALA does not publicly post full
What can we learn, two years on, from the ALA Nylons Forum 2021?
The military exchange’s online portal had grown 200% since 2020. Hosiery brands needed to optimize product listings (size charts, denier explanations, model photography). A dedicated session titled “Digital Shelf for Nylons” was a breakout hit.
The attendee list reads like a who’s who of legwear and military logistics: For the 2024 and 2025 schedules, check the
Total attendance was approximately 200-250 dedicated legwear and logistics professionals—small by ALA standards, but highly focused.
One surprising revelation was the growing interest in nylon 6,10 and nylon 5,10 as bio-based drop-in replacements. Several speakers argued that the volatility of fossil-based ADN made long-chain bio-nylons not just an environmental choice but a financial hedge.