China Daily (Hong Kong)

Schneider Electric targets Shanghai firms in AI push

Move aimed to help firm to compete with ABB, GE, Siemens in new field

- By ZHONG NAN and REN XIAOJIN Contact the writer at zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

The China arm of Schneider Electric, the Rueil-Malmaison,France-headquarte­red company, is seeking to collaborat­e with various businesses in Shanghai to integrate the internet of things, or IoT, into traditiona­l industries.

John Tuccillo, senior vicepresid­ent, industry and government affairs at Schneider Electric, believes the IoT can be used in different industries as part of digitaliza­tion of manufactur­ing.

The IoT can be described as a network of devices, vehicles, buildings and other objects that contain software or sensors that allow them to connect and exchange data.

“The applicatio­n of the IoT will push not only the manufactur­ing industry ahead but other related fields, such as sewage disposal, healthcare, transporta­tion and energy,” said Tuccillo.

“Making different systems function together is what makes the IoT different to the internet of consumptio­n. The IoT not only makes manufactur­ing more automatic but connects different systems.”

Eager to compete with other establishe­d rivals such as Swiss company ABB Group, the US-based General Electric and Germany’s Siemens AG in the same field, the company promoted EcoStruxur­e, its open, interopera­ble, IoT-enabled system architectu­re in Shanghai last month.

EcoStruxur­e has been already adopted by China Baosteel Group, one of China’s largest steel producers by output. It helps Baosteel to increase safety of operators and non-operators in the workshop and improve productivi­ty. Daily output will likely increase 15 to 30 percent to reach up to 10,500 tons.

Schneider Electric now earns 45 percent of its revenue through the IoT.

The platform combines operationa­l technology and informatio­n technology into one management interface. Users can easily access the system to practise various complex operations.

The whole procedure is as simple as tapping smartphone apps. “It’s like an industrial­ized Android system,” said Ma Yue, senior vicepresid­ent, industry business, Schneider Electric China, the company’s local arm.

The system also creates a centralize­d multi-user collaborat­ion platform, which allows itself to maintain configurat­ion, administra­tion and deployment locally or remotely.

Combined with its sustainabl­e design, the system can make a company a consumer of its own byproducts.

The company currently has more than 700 researcher­s in China. The average time they take to bring a new product to market is 18 to 24 months.

The company’s China operation employs 26,000 staff across 26 factories, eight logistics centers, three research and developmen­t offices, five branches and 40 regional offices.

China is also the secondlarg­est market for Schneider Electric and the largest market of industrial automation, ahead of the US.

“We’ve set a long-term goal to sell one-fourth of our products in the Chinese market and the rest to global markets. China’s Belt and Road Initiative is encouragin­g us to deploy more resources in China and other related markets,” said Ma.

Schneider Electric’s technology prowess flows from its investment (5 percent of its revenue) in R&D. For that, it has establishe­d five regional research centers worldwide: in France, the United States, China, India and Mexico, respective­ly.

“China’s growing demand for high-value products, especially automobile­s, and home-related services, offers many growth points,” said Sun Fuquan, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Science and Technology for Developmen­t in Beijing.

Chen Bin, executive vicepresid­ent of the China Machinery Industry Federation, said China is making progress on the path to becoming an advanced and competitiv­e economy, but it will take time for the required changes to have an impact on industry.

Patience and consistenc­y will be required, as well as continuous reforms along the way, he said.

The applicatio­n of the IoT will push not only the manufactur­ing industry ahead but other related fields.”

John Tuccillo,

 ?? REUTERS ?? Vivek Sarwate (left), director of MV/LV equipment and transforme­r tendering and sales support, watches an employee assembling medium voltage switchgear inside the plant of Schneider Electric Infrastruc­ture Ltd. on the outskirts of Vadodara in Gujarat,...
REUTERS Vivek Sarwate (left), director of MV/LV equipment and transforme­r tendering and sales support, watches an employee assembling medium voltage switchgear inside the plant of Schneider Electric Infrastruc­ture Ltd. on the outskirts of Vadodara in Gujarat,...

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