Khaleej Times

US companies installed more robots last year than ever before, as cheaper and more flexible machines put them within reach of businesses of all sizes and in more corners of the economy beyond their traditiona­l foothold in car plants.

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new york — US companies installed more robots last year than ever before, as cheaper and more flexible machines put them within reach of businesses of all sizes and in more corners of the economy beyond their traditiona­l foothold in car plants.

Shipments hit 28,478, nearly 16 per cent more than in 2017, according to data seen by Reuters that was set for release on Thursday by the Associatio­n for Advancing Automation, an industry group based in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Shipments increased in every sector the group tracks, except automotive, where carmakers cut back after finishing a major round of tooling up for new truck models.

Other sectors boomed. Shipments to food and consumer goods companies surged 60 per cent compared to the year before. Shipments to semiconduc­tor and electronic­s plants were up over 50 per cent, while shipments to metal producers rose 13 per cent.

Pressure to automate is growing as companies seek to cut labour costs in a tight job market. Many companies that are considerin­g bringing work back from overseas in response to the Trump administra­tion’s trade wars may find automation the best way to stay competitiv­e, even with higher-cost US workers.

Bob Doyle, vice-president of the Associatio­n for Advancing Automation, said automation is moving far beyond its traditiona­l foothold in auto assembly plants and other large manufactur­ers into warehouses and smaller factories.

One of those is Metro Plastics Technologi­es Inc, a family-owned business in Noblesvill­e, Indiana, which has only 125 employees and got its start in the 1970s making, among other things, mood rings. Last March, the company bought its first robot, an autonomous machine that carries finished parts from the production area to quality inspectors. In the past, that work was done by workers driving forklifts.

“We had three propane, 5,000-pound forklifts,” said Ken Hahn, the company’s president. “We’ve eliminated those.” Hahn’s robot cost $40,000, about twice that of the cheapest option he considered, but far below the $125,000 machines also on offer.

Last year marked the first time since 2010 that auto and auto part companies failed to account for more than half of shipments, coming at just under 49 per cent instead, according to the report. In 2017, over 60 per cent of shipments went to automakers. “The food industry is really

The food industry is really starting to take off” as a market for automation

Dan Hasley, director of sales and marketing, Kawasaki Robotics (USA)

starting to take off ” as a market for automation, said Dan Hasley, director of sales and marketing for Kawasaki Robotics (USA), part of Japan’s Kawasaki Heavy Industries. He added that “food and beverage is one of the segments that really responds to tight labor markets.”

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 ?? — AFP ?? Pressure to automate is growing in the US as companies seek to cut labour costs in a tight job market.
— AFP Pressure to automate is growing in the US as companies seek to cut labour costs in a tight job market.

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