From increasing use of automation and starting wages that are considered too low to the lackluster image of industrial work, there’s no shortage of opinions about the factors contributing to the current shortage of skilled workers in the industrial production industries. Confronted with a shortage of available workers, industrial companies are increasingly turning to technology to maintain their operations.
Aaron Crews, director for modernization solutions and consulting at Emerson said the personnel shortage in manufacturing has lasted long enough that organizations are now “hyper-focused on helping existing workers be more efficient and effective. And the key to doing more with fewer personnel is ensuring personnel have clear, contextualized visibility into their processes and equipment no matter where they are.”
More continuous processing industry customers are using “advanced and state-based control to capture expert knowledge and encapsulate it in control logic,” said Crews. “As experts retire, the knowledge they have built up over years in the plant can be captured as automated control strategies to ensure the control of critical process variables permanently resides in the control structure and are performed reliably every time.”
Technology as a lure
Despite the ability of technology to reduce the number of workers needed in industrial operations, some contend that manufacturing and processing industries’ increasing deployment of modern technologies can also be an important factor in attracting the workforce of the future.
He cited Beckhoff’s TwinCAT automation software as an example of this because it “gives engineers the capability to program in the language they are most familiar with or that suits the application best, whether that’s real time code using object-oriented extensions of IEC 61131-3, standard PLC function blocks, or interfacing to computer science standard languages, such as .Net or Python. Also, advanced functionality like analytics, machine learning, and simulation using MatLab/Simulink can be implemented directly in the standard engineering environment and deployed on our scalable industrial PCs.”
Hill added, “The more we can implement these types of new technologies, the better chance we have to recruit and retain this talent in our industry. [In fact], this is an area where I think remote access can help in recruitment. Many in this next generation of engineers may not be as enthusiastic about putting on fire-resistant smocks, steel-toe shoes and hard hats to go to work every day. If much of this engineering and monitoring can be done from comfortable offices, this will lead to higher recruitment of talent into the process industries.”