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Manufacturing Technology Insights | Thursday, August 05, 2021
Industry 4.0 is incredibly relevant to modern industrial facilities and is becoming increasingly vital. It is the next generation of technologies that will drive efficiency across the plant or factory floor.
FREMONT, CA: Leading industrial organizations are adopting a new generation of Environmental, Health, and Safety (EHS) and plant safety solutions to drive employee health and safety initiatives and help ensure secure and sustainable operations as the principles of the fourth industrial revolution, or Industry 4.0, become more widely accepted.
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The industrial workforce's digital transformation also drives improved efficiencies, which will eventually lead to a more prescriptive approach to plant and worker safety. It entails enhancing safety in various ways, from processes and workflows to building the safety culture.
In today's industrial operating environment, cutting-edge technologies such as linked devices, augmented and virtual reality tools, data analytics, machine learning, and mobile applications, all of which are part of a digital transformation toolkit, are receiving more attention. Digitalization is also assisting the industrial workforce in remaining compliant in terms of certifications, fatigue management, and the usage of valid Personal Protective Equipment (PPE). These techniques also enable worker competence through virtual reality training, allowing console operators, technicians, and other staff to practice a task before accessing the site.
Support for Industry 4.0
Industry 4.0 is incredibly relevant to modern industrial facilities and is becoming increasingly vital. It is the next generation of technologies that will drive efficiency across the plant or factory floor. Businesses who want to implement Industry 4.0-ready workflows, on the other hand, must enhance their plant and staff safety measures.
In the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) age, field devices, portable safety devices, and intelligent wearables—the complete biometric input into EHS software—have a close relationship. Despite increasing technological developments, the fundamental procedure for reporting and documenting safety incidents and risks is still built on a top-down, historical approach that relies heavily on manual spreadsheets and other paper forms.
Plant operators will be able to automate various manual safety processes, removing human error and automatically supplying crucial data for workflows to generate appropriate responses to events on an instantaneous basis due to a new level of Industry 4.0-driven integration, scalability, and collaboration.
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