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Infosys' study on global manufacturing shows intriguing results

By Swati Sanyal Tarafdar,

Added 15 May 2015

Global manufacturing study shows early signs of adoption of groundbreaking machine-to-data technologies with china leading the way

Infosys together with the Institute for Industrial Management (FIR) at the University of Aachen, Germany (RWTH) has published the results of a global study on asset efficiency. [http://www.infosys.com/industry-4-0 ].

The study's objective was to measure the maturity of asset efficiency strategies in industrial manufacturing worldwide.
The study polled more than 400 industrial manufacturing and process industry executives in China, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States across several sectors including aerospace, automotive, electronics and machinery.

Key findings of the study:

• 85 percent of manufacturing companies globally are aware of the potential of technologies in increasing asset efficiency. However, only 15 percent of enterprises surveyed have already implemented dedicated strategies to this end by analysing machine data

• 57 percent of companies measure the operational efficiency of production machinery and production systems with indicators, but only 13 percent do this in real-time

• 13 percent of companies use real-time data for maintenance. This varies by country with Germany and France reporting lower levels, nine and six percent respectively, and the United States at 21 percent

• While 81 percent of respondents are aware of the potential of machine condition surveillance for enhancing maintenance, only 17 percent have put such principles into practice

• 89 percent are aware of the high potential of information efficiency, yet only 11 percent have systematically implemented this

The research revealed that the largest improvements planned over the next five years are in the areas of information interoperability, data standardisation and advanced analytics. Manufacturing being energy intensive, the majority (88 percent) of the companies surveyed have identified energy management as a critical factor for achieving asset efficiency. 

However, only 15 percent use systematic and integrated implementation of energy efficiency throughout the lifecycle of assets

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