
Rack Collapse Prevention (RCP) is closing out 2025 with a year it describes as one of major progress, marked by expanded global installations and growing demand for solutions designed to strengthen warehouse safety and operational resilience.
Managing Director Lee Whiting said 2025 had been a defining year for the business, noting that RCP had supported companies navigating economic uncertainty by providing systems that reduce the risk of racking failures and associated disruption. He said the company’s solutions offer warehouse teams greater confidence, explaining that “2025 has been a landmark year for RCP”, and that its systems help to “safeguard operations and drive measurable cost efficiencies.” Looking ahead, he added that RCP’s commitment to safety and performance “remains unwavering.”
RCP equipment is now used across a wide variety of sites, including multi-estate operations where consistent safety standards are essential. According to the company, customers have reported steep reductions in rack-collapse incidents, protecting both workers and inventory while avoiding the extensive downtime and repair costs that can follow structural failures. With budgets under pressure, RCP argues that long-term savings and reduced operational risk are becoming more important to warehouse operators.
Customer feedback reflects this trend, with businesses citing improved workforce confidence, strengthened protection in high-bay warehouses and peace of mind following previous racking incidents.
RCP systems are designed to meet global safety regulations and are positioned as supporting wider ESG objectives, offering firms a route to combine safety with sustainability.
In what RCP describes as a challenging economic period, the company says operators are prioritising technologies that deliver clear business value. It highlights benefits including engineered protection to prevent collapse, scalability across large estates and the potential to offer a competitive edge by demonstrating strong risk-management practices.
Whiting said businesses should consider whether safety can act as a point of differentiation, adding that warehouses without adequate protection face the risk of product loss, downtime and reputational damage. He argued that installing RCP systems helps “future-proof your operations and delivers safety without compromise, for people, products, and business performance.”