Bangkok Post

Robotics, SI sector back procuremen­t

- LAMONPHET APISITNIRA­N

Local robotics and system integrator (SI) producers are calling for the Industry Ministry’s robotics cluster committee to propose the government add a procuremen­t rule for its agencies to purchase Thai-made robotics and SI products to beef up local demand and attract further investment.

Prapin Abhinorasa­eth, president of the Thai Automation and Robotics Associatio­n (TARA), said related operators want to propose this suggestion to the committee next month as they believe it can increase procuremen­t demand f rom government agencies.

He said Thai and foreign investors want to invest in the robotics and SI sector in Thailand because the government has an ambitious policy to promote and support this cluster.

“TARA believes government procuremen­t is a key engine to creating actual demand in the robotics and SI sector locally. This policy will also attract investors from abroad,” he said.

Japan’s Nachi-Fujikoshi Corporatio­n and Australia’s Anca Manufactur­ing Thailand are interested in robotic arms to serve both domestic and overseas markets.

The robotics cluster committee is jointly run by the government, private sector and educationa­l institutes. The Institute of Field Robotics (FIBO) under King Mongkut’s University of Technology Thonburi has been targeted as an important centre for developing manpower and robotics.

Djitt Laowattana, FIBO’s founder, said investment in robotics and the SI sector in Thailand is projected to reach 60 billion baht in 2018 thanks to the government’s S-curve policy, as robotics is one of 10 targeted industries.

“That target can be reached as many foreign companies have expressed their intention to invest in robotics here, including those from China, Japan and Europe,” he said.

Mr Djitt forecasts local demand for robotics and SI products at 6,0006,500 units annually, a figure that will only grow with the government’s Thailand 4.0 initiative, intended to upgrade the industrial sector with higher technology.

Somwang Boonrakcha­roen, president of the Thai-German Institute, said Thailand’s robotics and SI market needs 5,000 more technician­s to serve this sector, with total employment in the Eastern Economic Corridor projected at 100,000 workers.

The government is working with many educationa­l institutes in Thailand to produce the technician­s needed to serve the robotics labour market.

There is also an ambitious five-year target for the robotics cluster to produce robotics technology locally by 2023. The Board of Investment offers incentives for robotics manufactur­ers, such as a corporate income tax exemption for 3-8 years and an import duty exemption for new machinery and raw materials.

Companies can enjoy a 50% deduction on corporate income tax for three years when they invest and expand their local manufactur­ing plants with upgraded technology and machinery.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand