Functional Safety Events Radar – May ’26 Edition

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Functional Safety Events Radar — May 2026

Mid-May is lighter on dedicated functional safety events — but that is exactly when it pays to look at what is happening in industry-adjacent programmes. We have one standout workshop later this month, plus we have also pulled together the full June preview so you can plan registrations before the summer slowdown hits.

Events this month

eARTS 2026 (6th European Automotive Reliability, Test & Safety Workshop)

One-line summary: Hardware safety validation and reliability engineering practitioners, in one room in Chania.

Why join?
A practitioner-focused workshop at the intersection of hardware reliability, failure analysis, and safety validation. Good cross-domain signal if you work on FMEDA reviews, hardware safety validation, or automotive reliability engineering.
Note: Co-located with the 31st IEEE ETS as a fringe event.

Keywords: automotive reliability, hardware safety validation, FMEDA, safety validation, automotive electronics

Industry adjacent (FuSa sessions woven in)

Safety-critical topics are structurally built into the programmes of these events — present in named sessions and speaker tracks. If you work at the FuSa/SDV or FuSa/testing intersection, these are worth having on your radar.

Automotive Software Strategies 2026

One-line summary: An SDV software strategy conference where safety-critical software runs through 4 named sessions.

FuSa sessions spotted: Worth attending if you’re navigating the SDV transition.

Day 1 – 19th May

  • “Keynote: Open-Source Development for Safety-Critical Series Projects” — Dr. Martin Wagner, BMW AG
  • “From Open Source to Automotive-Grade: Distributing Eclipse S-CORE for Safety-Critical and Real-Time Embedded Systems” — Paula Herzog, Qorix GmbH

Day 2 – 20th May

  • “From Vibe Coding to Spec-Driven Development — How AI Agents Transform Automotive Software Engineering” — Georg Doll, Microsoft.
  • “The RTOS as a Differentiating Commodity” — Arnaud van den Bosche, Green Hills Software.

Keywords: SDV, software architecture, safety-critical software, open-source, AI in safety engineering

MedConf 2026

One-line summary: Highly relevant for safety-critical software and device development in medical technology.

Why join?
One confirmed FuSa session — “Functional Safety — Safety Relevant Software on COTS Hardware” by Tom Scott Kroslowski (20 May, 12:25) — inside a broader programme on ISO 14971 risk management, IEC 60601 series, regulatory requirements, and AI in medical devices. Worth tracking if your work touches medical safety-critical software or crosses between industrial and medical FuSa.

Keywords: medical device safety, ISO 14971, IEC 60601, safety-critical software, regulated industries

Coming up in June

SCSC Workshop: How to Make the Most of AI (for Safety Engineers)

One-line summary: AI tools for safety engineers — framed specifically for FuSa practice, not generic productivity advice.

Why join?
A practical workshop framing AI specifically for safety engineers — how to use AI tools meaningfully when the output ends up in a safety case, argument, or review. Rare in that it addresses the FuSa-specific question, not generic productivity advice.

Keywords: functional safety practice, AI tooling, safety-critical systems, safety engineering

Safety.AD USA 2026

One-line summary: Functional, operational & system safety for L3+ automated vehicles — the US edition.

Why join?
The US counterpart to Safety.AD Europe — discussion-heavy panel format on SOTIF, AD system-level safety argumentation, and US operational safety practice. A good read on how US OEMs and regulators approach AD safety.

Keywords: ADAS/AD safety, operational safety, functional safety, SOTIF, L3+ vehicles

Coming up in June — Industry adjacent (FuSa sessions woven in)

iVT Expo Europe 2026

One-line summary: Two confirmed FuSa relevant sessions for off-highway and mobile machinery.

Why join?
Relevant if you work on functional safety for off-highway machinery, fail-functional system architectures, or CAN/embedded-networking safety. Two confirmed FuSa-relevant sessions inside —

  • “CAN-related standards and specifications for embedded networking in mobile machines” (10 Jun, 10:20–10:40) by Martin Merkel, CAN in Automation (CiA)
  • “Safety you generate yourself — Husco’s unique fail-functional SbW system” by Simon Yardley and Dave Joyce, Husco (11 Jun, 14:40–15:00).

Keywords: off-highway, mobile machinery safety, steer-by-wire, fail-functional, CAN networking

Automate 2026

One-line summary: Two confirmed FuSa sessions in the “Safety in Automation & Manufacturing” track.

Why join?
Relevant if your work touches industrial robot safety, machine safety, or ISO 10218 / ISO 13849 territory. Two confirmed sessions in the “Safety in Automation & Manufacturing” track —

  • “Maximizing Robot Throughput and Safety with Industrial Safety Agents” (22 Jun, 11:15 AM – 12:00 PM)
  • “Exploring the New ISO 10218 Standards and Revised R15.06” by Roberta Nelson Shea, Universal Robots (23 Jun, 1:30 PM – 2:15 PM).

Keywords: industrial robot safety, ISO 10218, ISO 13849, machine safety, automation safety

R.A.M.S. Europe 2026

One-line summary: Reliability, availability, maintainability & safety — cross-industry, practitioner-focused.

Why join?
Cross-industry practitioner conference at the intersection of safety assurance, reliability, and dependability (energy, rail, process, automotive). Relevant for FuSa engineers who build safety cases that integrate reliability/availability arguments or work at IEC 61508 system level.

Keywords: RAMS, reliability, safety assurance, IEC 61508, dependability


The June edition of the Functional Safety Events Radar drops mid-June — covering the second half of June and looking ahead to July.

Attending an event not on the list? Or know one we should track?

Let us know — we’ll check it for the next edition.

Disclaimer: Event details are sourced from organizer websites and are correct at the time of publishing — always verify dates and registration directly with organizers before booking travel.

Aravindha

Aravindha

LinkedIn: Aravindha