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Improving Reliability by Monitoring Events Digitally
Improving Reliability by Monitoring Events Digitally
Capex is under scrutiny, but some investments can pay for themselves quickly.
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Capex is under scrutiny, but some investments can pay for themselves quickly.
The Covid-19 pandemic has touched billions of people around the world and brought millions of businesses to a virtual standstill. Many business leaders, who were already concerned about their abilities to care for their people, are now also trying to determine how to endure the economic shocks that are sure to follow in the pandemic’s wake. Many are reviewing investment plans, including programs to digitally transform their operations. While some more elaborate programs should pause, others deliver quickly on reasonable investments.
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One of these is event-driven reliability, a stepping-stone toward predictive maintenance that helps companies digitally monitor their assets and guard against the risk of failure and lost production. Event-driven reliability taps existing process controls and sensors (for example, temperature, flow rate and pressure) across disparate information sources to determine whether equipment is operating outside of normal conditions (see Figure 1). It builds off traditional condition-based monitoring by using advanced analytics and new workflow tools to generate real-time, targeted insights about future performance. Abnormal conditions trigger events like an automated action (for example, sending out a work request or stopping a process) or a notification to an expert who can decide what action to take.
Done right, event-driven reliability is fast to implement, making use of the installed base of sensors to improve safety and reduce the need for staff in the field. It can also reduce your maintenance operating expenses, which can account for 25% to 35% of operating expenses.
The ability of businesses to continue to operate with fewer people on site will be important in the months and years ahead. One North American mining company was able to quickly set up monitoring of more than 100 kilometers of critical underground conveyor belts, simplifying a task that had been performed either through manual inspection or by teams reviewing reports after the fact, sometimes a few weeks later. After an implementation period of four weeks, an event-driven reliability system now monitors the entire system twice a second, looking for events that indicate a potential failure. In the first month online, the company avoided about 20 hours of downtime that might otherwise have occurred, and over the first four months detected more than 30 potential downtime events with no false positives.
In addition to guarding against imminent failure, a continuous feed of asset information also informs decisions about risk levels, allowing operations and maintenance teams to make critical decisions balancing production and reliability. One chemicals manufacturer used a risk assessment to determine which pieces of major equipment posed a higher risk of failure, and so should be taken offline for service, while others were allowed to operate on full during high-demand periods.
These systems also allow engineers to monitor activity remotely, even from home. One oil and gas company saved $8 million over six months by remotely monitoring oil well temperatures, which reduced unnecessary inspections and truck rolls by 18%.
In many plants and other assets, the information necessary to keep things running smoothly resides in the heads of engineers and managers who may have worked on-site for decades. Setting up an event-based reliability system captures and codifies this knowledge, creating opportunities to revisit existing maintenance strategies that may not have been reviewed or optimized in years. Relieving experts of the burden of monitoring systems can free up time that could instead be invested in optimizing operational and maintenance processes.
Successful implementations deliver quickly on the investment by adhering to four key principles.
In the years ahead, industrial companies will develop more comprehensive predictive maintenance systems. Until then, there’s a long tail of opportunities, monitoring systems and identifying patterns that suggest risk, and digital, event-driven reliability systems can help them do that affordably. Investing in these systems today can help companies build in resilience that helps them weather the turbulent period we are just entering.
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The global Covid-19 pandemic has extracted a terrible human toll and spurred sweeping changes in the world economy. Across industries, executives have begun reassessing their strategies and repositioning their companies to thrive now and in the world beyond coronavirus.