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Cognite Atlas AI™ Drives Customer Momentum with New Major Release, Accelerates Adoption of Agentic AI to Unlock More Industrial Value

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Cognite Atlas AI™ Drives Customer Momentum with New Major Release, Accelerates Adoption of Agentic AI to Unlock More Industrial Value
News

News

Cognite Atlas AI™ Drives Customer Momentum with New Major Release, Accelerates Adoption of Agentic AI to Unlock More Industrial Value

2025-09-10 03:01 Last Updated At:03:10

TOKYO & PHOENIX--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sep 9, 2025--

Cognite, the global leader in industrial AI, today announced a major release of Cognite Atlas AI ™, the only low-code industrial AI agent workbench to power agents with real-time, AI-ready operational technology (OT), information technology (IT), and engineering data. This rapid momentum includes onboarding new customers weekly, a testament to its effectiveness in driving industrial digital transformation and value. The latest product release will be showcased at an oversubscribed Atlas AI Summit with hundreds of attendees in Tokyo, Japan, on September 10th.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250909488860/en/

“This latest release of Cognite Atlas AI is a true game-changer,” said Nobuyoshi Hojo, General Manager, Technology & Engineering Center, at Idemitsu Kosan Co., Ltd. “AI agents are amplifying our impact and improving safety, reducing plant downtime, and unlocking new levels of innovation across our refineries. We are not merely automating tasks; we are leveraging reliable AI-driven insights to continuously improve our business processes and generate significant value across the organization. This is a crucial step in our digital transformation journey.”

A recent survey from PwC reveals a significant gap between AI exploration and full-scale adoption, with 79% of businesses experimenting with AI agents, yet only 19% deploying them at scale. To help bridge this divide, this latest milestone release is designed to accelerate and simplify the deployment of production-ready AI agents. This new release includes powerful features that empower organizations to implement AI solutions faster and with greater confidence. Key enhancements include:

"Cognite’s latest release for Cognite Atlas AI is a leap toward narrowing the pilot‑to‑production gap," said Joe Lamming, Senior Analyst, Technical Lead, AI Applied, at Verdantix. "Our research shows scalable agents depend on extremely precise context engineering – domain models that faithfully represent what matters, machine‑traversable semantic connections, massive concurrency, governed tool access, and drill‑down observability – well beyond what a chat interface alone provides. Atlas AI natively extends Cognite's DataOps platform to automate common operational tasks in a user-configurable, domain-specific low-code workbench. We see such product suites as there to enable scoped, production‑grade automations with human oversight – not just early-adopter demos – for more organizations."

"The industrial world is at a crucial inflection point where the true value of AI lies not in isolated experiments, but in scalable, production-ready solutions," said Chirayu Shah, Chief Product Officer, Cognite. "Our latest release of Cognite Atlas AI is a direct response to this need. We're empowering our customers to accelerate their digital transformation and unlock significant value by turning AI agents into a foundational part of their operations. We have customers across industry verticals in production with Atlas AI, in the Americas, EMEA, and Japan."

Register to attend Cognite's global Industrial AI and Data Conference, Impact 2025, to hear more from industry leaders about Atlas AI and how agentic AI is transforming operations.

About Cognite

Cognite makes GenAI work for industry. Leading energy, manufacturing, and power & renewables enterprises choose Cognite to deliver secure, trustworthy, and real-time data to transform their asset-heavy operations to be safer, more sustainable, and profitable. Cognite provides a user-friendly, secure, and scalable platform that makes it easy for all decision-makers, from the field to remote operations centers, to access and understand complex industrial data, collaborate in real-time, and build a better tomorrow. Visit us at www.cognite.com and follow us on LinkedIn and X.

About Cognite Atlas AI

Cognite Atlas AI™ unlocks the full potential of industrial data, empowering teams to make faster, more confident decisions and accelerate operational efficiency and innovation at scale. Cognite Atlas AI includes a growing library of preconfigured agents, a low-code agent builder, purpose-built industrial tools, and a curated selection of LLMs with benchmarking. It also utilizes the real-time OT, IT, and engineering data in Cognite Data Fusion ®, ensuring that agents deliver accurate, traceable, and trustworthy results for industrial workflows.

Cognite, the global leader in industrial AI, today announced a major release of Cognite Atlas AI™, the only low-code industrial AI agent workbench to power agents with real-time, AI-ready operational technology (OT), information technology (IT), and engineering data.

Cognite, the global leader in industrial AI, today announced a major release of Cognite Atlas AI™, the only low-code industrial AI agent workbench to power agents with real-time, AI-ready operational technology (OT), information technology (IT), and engineering data.

RABAT, Morocco (AP) — Tanzania and Tunisia secured the last two available spots in the Africa Cup of Nations last 16 on Tuesday, thanks to their 1-1 draw in Group C.

It wrecked Angola's hopes of squeezing through as one of the best third-place finishers with just two points from Group B. Angola’s goal difference was better than that of Comoros, the third-place finisher in Group A.

Feisal Salum’s equalizer for Tanzania sent the Taifa Stars through. While Tanzania and Angola both finished with two points and a goal difference of minus 1, the goal scored by Salum, who is commonly known as Fei Toto, took Tanzania's tally to three — one better than Angola's two goals.

All the other group stage survivors were decided already on Monday because of Angola and Comoros’ relatively low points total. It meant teams that already had more than two points and were already assured of at least third place in their groups could be certain of reaching the last 16.

The four best third-place teams from the six groups progress, along with the top two in each. Head-to-head results are the first determining factor if two teams finish with the same amount of points in a group.

Here's a look at which teams went through from the six groups:

Host nation Morocco progressed as the winner of Group A, followed by second-place Mali with just three points from three draws. Morocco next faces a third-place finisher from Groups C, D or E on Sunday. More importantly for the Atlas Lions, they will continue their run to the final in the almost 70,000-capacity Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium, which will also stage the final on Jan. 18. Mali awaits Tunisia for a showdown in Casablanca on Saturday.

Seven-time champion Egypt won Group B to advance with South Africa in second, ahead of Angola. Egypt stays in Agadir and next faces a third-place finisher from Groups A, C or D on Jan. 5. South Africa faces a likely tough game against the runner-up in Group F on Sunday.

Nigeria was already sure of topping Group C before its 3-1 win over Uganda on Tuesday. The Super Eagles will remain in Fez for their first knockout game against a third-place finisher from Groups A, B or F on Jan. 5. Tunisia faces Mali in the last 16, and Tanzania progressed as the fourth-best third-place finisher.

In Group D, which had its final games later Tuesday, 2021 winner Senegal, Congo and Benin were all sure of progressing as they all had three points or more, and were already certain to finish above Botswana, which lost to Senegal and Benin before its final game against Congo. Even if Botswana beat Congo, it could not finish above Benin because of their head-to-head record.

Algeria is certain to win Group E before its final group games, and Burkina Faso and Sudan are certain to advance because they cannot finish below Equatorial Guinea, which lost both games against them. Algeria will play the second-place finisher from Group D on Jan 6. in the same Rabat stadium where it has played all its games so far.

Defending champion Ivory Coast, five-time winner Cameroon, and Mozambique are assured of progress from Group F. Gabon, sure to finish last, was already eliminated before the last round of group games on Wednesday, when the order of the top three teams will be decided. Ivory Coast plays Gabon and Cameroon faces Mozambique.

AP at the Africa Cup: https://apnews.com/hub/africa-cup-of-nations

Morocco fans wait for the start of the Africa Cup of Nations group A soccer match between Zambia and Morocco in Rabat, Morocco, Monday, Dec. 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

Morocco fans wait for the start of the Africa Cup of Nations group A soccer match between Zambia and Morocco in Rabat, Morocco, Monday, Dec. 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

Tunisia's supporters wait for the start of the Africa Cup of Nations group C soccer match between Tanzania and Tunisia in Rabat, Morocco, Tuesday, Dec. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Mosa'ab Elshamy)

Tunisia's supporters wait for the start of the Africa Cup of Nations group C soccer match between Tanzania and Tunisia in Rabat, Morocco, Tuesday, Dec. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Mosa'ab Elshamy)

A Moroccan fan waits for the start of the Africa Cup of Nations group A soccer match between Zambia and Morocco in Rabat, Morocco, Monday, Dec. 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

A Moroccan fan waits for the start of the Africa Cup of Nations group A soccer match between Zambia and Morocco in Rabat, Morocco, Monday, Dec. 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

A Moroccan fan waits for the start of the Africa Cup of Nations group A soccer match between Zambia and Morocco in Rabat, Morocco, Monday, Dec. 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

A Moroccan fan waits for the start of the Africa Cup of Nations group A soccer match between Zambia and Morocco in Rabat, Morocco, Monday, Dec. 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

Senegal fans support their national team during the Africa Cup of Nations group D soccer match between Senegal and DR Congo in Tangier, Morocco, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

Senegal fans support their national team during the Africa Cup of Nations group D soccer match between Senegal and DR Congo in Tangier, Morocco, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

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