Unilever is partnering with Accenture on a multi-year programme to scale AI-powered digital twins across its global manufacturing network. The company says the initiative will add more than 40 new digital twins within 18 months and create a blueprint for wider deployment across factories worldwide. Digital twins are described as virtual replicas of production equipment and lines that use live data from physical systems to monitor, simulate, and predict performance. Unilever says combining these models with AI-driven insights and AI agents will help factory teams spot problems earlier, run scenario simulations faster, and support more informed operational decisions.

Accenture’s role focuses on deploying industrial AI capabilities, including advanced analytics and AI agents designed to predict maintenance needs and help teams take corrective action sooner. The companies say automation may increase over time under human oversight as confidence in the systems grows.

Unilever also cites existing results from digital twins at specific sites, including improvements in waste reduction and production capacity at its Raeford facility in the United States, energy consumption optimization at its Haldia plant in India, and a reduction in quality defects at its Gandhidham site. The reports also state the technology supports aims around efficiency, quality, and sustainability.