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SIEMENS TO OPEN GLOBAL AIRPORT AND CARGO DIVISION IN DUBAI

▶ The new unit will be in Dubai South and will operate alongside a digital platform

- MASSOUD A DERHALLY Munich

Siemens has created a global division catering to airports, cargo and logistics in Dubai in conjunctio­n with a digital platform, or industrial internet of things, near the Expo 2020 site. The new unit will be operationa­l from the first quarter of 2018 and is part of the German industrial major’s focus on innovation and its core technologi­es.

“We see this really as a growth market and we thought it’s best to build it there where you have one of the biggest hubs in the world which is Dubai... We are starting that as we speak, we are ramping it up,” Roland Busch, chief technology officer of Siemens said.

“It has two legs. One is on Expo 2020 in Dubai. We are bringing the MindSphere technology platform to it,” he said. “The other leg is that we are locating our headquarte­r for airports and cargo to Dubai; driving digitalisa­tion there. This is very much digitalisa­tion driven, the way you optimise your flow in your airport or cargo is definitely impacted heavily by digital transforma­tion.”

Siemens, which ranks among the 10 largest software companies globally, has been investing aggressive­ly in research and developmen­t (R&D) and acquisitio­n of software companies as it seeks to strengthen its position to leverage data analytics and the global economy’s pivot towards digitisati­on, automation and electrific­ation.

The company plans to increase R&D spending by 8 per cent in 2018 to €5.6 billion (US $6.57bn) from €5.2bn a year earlier. About €1.2bn of the total is invested in its digital business. Since 2014, the company has increased R&D spending by 40 per cent. Siemen’s MindSphere Applicatio­n centre in Dubai and the new business unit dedicated to airports and cargo will be based in the Dubai South area next to the Expo 2020 site.

The efficacy of the platform will receive a boost when Siemen’s partnershi­p with Amazon Web Services, the most popular cloud provider, comes into effect next month. “MindSphere is an open operating system. You can connect all the different dots, the energy system, the buildings, mobility under one umbrella, a sector coupling so to speak,” Mr Busch said.

“So you can gather data, store the data and make them available for creating cases and applicatio­ns. Northbound of our operating system, we have open APIs [applicatio­n programmin­g interface], any third party can use the data and programme their applicatio­ns on it.”

Siemens has about 40,000 employees dedicated to R&D. The company has 200 data and artificial intelligen­ce (AI) analysts who added to the number of software applicatio­ns last year by 250. Siemen’s leveraging of AI and digital technologi­es such as 3D has already led to Strata and Etihad to develop the region’s first 3D-printed parts for aircraft interiors.

Mr Busch is dismissive of critics who ask what happens when machines no longer need humans to direct them as AI becomes more advanced.

“If you would have worried about the people feeding the horses and taking care of them in the past, we would never have combustion cars,” he said. “It’s technology rolling in, it kills certain jobs, you don’t need so many horses anymore. In these kind of disruptive changes you always have some jobs which are transforme­d and others which are created,” he said.

An aging global population is also adversely affecting the world’s economy and technology can provide the reboot that can foster growth, Mr Busch said. “We are living in an aging society globally. China’s labour market has peaked,” he said.

Making his point Mr Bush cited a study by the consultanc­y McKinsey which illustrate­d waning growth over a 50-year period compared to a previous period due to the lower number of people entering the labour force because of an ageing population.

The gap in productivi­ty can be bridged through the deployment of new technologi­es, Mr Busch said.

“It’s not worrying about not creating enough jobs to feed people,” he said. “It’s more about new jobs coming up, where people have to be trained and deployed.”

Siemens spends €500 million on training employees annually.

The Munich company has been trimming, restructur­ing and spinning off businesses as it vies to become more nimble and efficient. Siemens plans to list a minority stake between 15 to 25 per cent of Healthinee­rs, its medical equipment business on the Frankfurt stock exchange in the first half of 2018, Mr Busch said.

The IPO is slated to be Germany’s largest offering since Deutsche Telekom’s IPO listing in 1996, and is estimated to value the unit at €40 bn.

“Let’s see how the market reacts. We are going to IPO it… we are just about to make the market for it and introduce it,” Mr Busch said.

Brexit and the ensuing uncertaint­y over Europe’s relationsh­ip with the United Kingdom did not dissuade Siemens from listing the company in London, he said.

The lingering question for Siemens is related to how Brexit will impact the pound and the UK’s economy which may adversely affect the company’s overall performanc­e.

The company continues to collaborat­e with Rolls-Royce and Airbus to develop a single-aisle 100-seater hybrid electric aircraft that is likely to be operationa­l commercial­ly by 2030, he said.

The prototype and testing will be complete by 2020, Mr Busch said.

We see this really as a growth market and we thought it’s best to build it there where you have one of the biggest hubs ROLAND BUSCH Chief technology officer at Siemens

 ?? Reuters ?? Siemens headquarte­rs in Munich. The company ranks among the 10 largest software companies globally
Reuters Siemens headquarte­rs in Munich. The company ranks among the 10 largest software companies globally

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