Cority Showcases the AI-Driven Future of EHS+ at Cority Connect 2026

Cority demonstrates over 30 AI workflows now live in CorityOne, the most extensive real-world deployment of AI in EHS+ software to date.

Mar. 18, 2026 at 10:10am

At Cority Connect 2026, the company demonstrated dozens of AI workflows now live on its CorityOne platform, including a medical scribe that allows clinics to see 10% more patients and an environmental permit analyzer that eliminates hundreds of hours of admin work. Cority showcased how its Cortex AI layer can automate work, surface insights, and help organizations move from reactive compliance toward proactive risk prevention.

Why it matters

As organizations begin exploring AI, many are realizing that the technology is only as effective as the systems behind it. Fragmented point solutions and disconnected data make it difficult to generate reliable insights, pushing many organizations to rethink how their EHS+ technology is structured. Cority's extensive deployment of AI in real-world workflows highlights the growing demand for unified platforms that can bring together safety, health, environmental, and operational risk data.

The details

Throughout the Cority Connect event, the company demonstrated over 30 AI workflows now live on its CorityOne platform, supported by 13 agents and a centralized control center. These demonstrations ranged from a medical scribe that allows clinics to see 10% more patients every day to an environmental permit analyzer that eliminates hundreds of hours of admin work and improves compliance. The showcased AI capabilities are designed to automate work, surface insights, and help organizations move from reactive compliance toward proactive risk prevention.

  • Cority Connect 2026 took place last week in Orlando, Florida.

The players

Cority

An environmental, health and safety software company that provides a unified platform for managing safety, health, environmental, and operational risk data.

Ryan Magee

The CEO of Cority, who opened the Cority Connect conference by discussing the profound and immediate effect that AI will have on the EHS+ industry.

Eric Olson

The Chief Marketing Officer at Cority, who discussed early findings from an upcoming industry report on the state of EHS+ technology and the growing tension between the speed of AI adoption and the systems organizations need to manage it responsibly.

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What they’re saying

“AI will have a profound and immediate effect on this industry if we get it right. But let's be clear, AI is not replacing you, and it's not replacing Cority. AI cannot do what you do. When it comes to EHS+, industry expertise is still king. It always has been and it always will be. The reason AI is so important in EHS is because the work is important. This isn't about removing costs. It's about making a bigger impact on the health and safety of our workforce and our communities.”

— Ryan Magee, CEO, Cority

“In one of the most risk adverse industries in the world, nearly everyone is going around the system to use AI. The appetite is there, but most said they still run on foundations that weren't built to support it. The data is clear: AI is accelerating the shift from point solutions to platforms capable of handling new demands for security, data consolidation, and AI governance.”

— Eric Olson, Chief Marketing Officer, Cority

What’s next

Cority will be releasing the full findings from the State of EHS+ Technology report later this month, which will be available on the company's website.

The takeaway

Cority's extensive deployment of AI-powered workflows in its CorityOne platform highlights the growing demand for unified EHS+ technology that can bring together disparate data sources and apply AI to automate tasks, surface insights, and help organizations shift from reactive compliance to proactive risk prevention.