By now, you’ve probably heard all about the ways that smart manufacturing can help you boost productivity, cut operating costs and generally do more with less.
What you may not know is that it can also make your business safer.
The sensor networks and connectivity that enable real-time tracking of machine performance and prediction of maintenance needs also allow environmental monitoring that can spot chemical and temperature hazards, track physiological data of workers in high-risk environments and streamline lockout and tagout systems.
Taking advantage of that capability has the potential to be a game-changer, safety experts agree, both for workers and their employers.
“With the ability to capture and analyze massive amounts of safety-system and operational data, safety professionals can move from merely describing what went wrong to predicting and preventing incidents in the first place,” Peter Bussey, an analyst with LNS Research, says in a white paper posted on Rockwell Automation’s website.
Read More: 3 Ways Digital PPE Is Outsmarting Workplace Hazards
About half of factories today lack real-time visibility into environmental, health and safety data, but those that have begun addressing the gap by investing in safety technology upgrades have achieved significant results. Some 75 percent reported operational improvements, and 60 percent discovered financial benefits, LNS said.
Leveraging wearable devices and other tools to sync people and equipment gives businesses a new arsenal of safety-management tools, according to Rockwell Automation, which specializes in digital manufacturing applications through The Connected Enterprise, its portfolio of integrated control and information software. Those include:
- Remote access: Central monitoring of isolated operations such as oil pump stations means workers don’t have to travel as often for inspections, curbing potential transportation accidents.
- Operational visibility: Real-time updates on manufacturing processes can help prevent accidents such as releasing hazardous chemicals.
- Locating workers: Wearable sensors provide a valuable link to colleagues and, if needed, emergency personnel when employees are in difficult-to-access spots like underground mines. Video and voice technology can also enable communication in a crisis.
- Relaying information: Wireless and mobile technology can capture data on working conditions such as ergonomics, reducing the chances of injury to workers with certain health issues or in higher-risk environments.
Industry 4.0 tools also can simplify collection and storage of the reams of data for reports required by regulators such as the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration, a boon to employers facing mandates to supply more information.
One rule change proposed this year by OSHA, which hasn’t yet been finalized, would require employers in higher-risk industries including metalworking to submit more detailed digital records on workplace injuries and illnesses, some of which would be posted online.
The regulator estimates its new rule on digital injury reports would cost the private sector $3.9 million a year, or about $81 per affected business.
The time and money required for such tasks has been a pain point for some businesses, but experts say making factories and machine shops safer ultimately buoys profit, a benefit that smart technology only enhances.
It “can boost productivity, identify and resolve common machine-stoppage problems—and even predict production issues before they happen,” a Rolls-Royce health and safety manager said in a post on the engine-maker’s website.
Talk to Us!
Leave a reply
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *