Title: COLLABORATION The Answer to Sustainable Manufacturing
1COLLABORATIONThe Answer to Sustainable
Manufacturing
Robert G. Kiggans Vice Chairman, SCRA Applied
RD U.S. IMS Head of Delegation
2AGENDA
- U.S. Manufacturing Strategy Policy
- Manufacturing Innovation
- IMS Program
3U.S. Manufacturing Strategy Policy
- U.S. Manufacturing sector valued at about 1.6
Trillion. Represents 60 of U.S. exports. - Accounts for 70 of private sector research and
development. - However, losing ground in the face of global
competition. - Trade gap has widened to nearly 100 billion.
4Presidents Council of Advisors on Science
Technology (PCAST)
- Issued report on Advanced Manufacturing and
reminded us why manufacturing remains an
essential driver of our economy. - Government should play an important role through
the development of an innovation policy. - Support sustained investments in basic research
to promote scientific discoveries, but also
co-invest in precompetitive applied research.
5(PCAST)
- Report also looked at areas such as tax, trade,
workforce, small business, and education policies
and how each either helped or hindered the
manufacturing sector. - Given PCASTs recommendations, the President has
made revitalization of manufacturing a key part
of his economic strategy.
6Structural Cost of Manufacturing
- U.S. Manufacturers face a 20 cost burden over
competitors from our largest trading partners. - Corporate tax rates make up over half that burden
as other countries have reduced rates.
U.S. Canada Mexico Japan China Germany U.K. Korea Taiwan France
1997 40 44 34 51 33 57 31 30 25 36
2010 40 31 30 40 25 29 28 24 17 33
The Manufacturing Institute MAPI - October 2011
7U.S. Manufacturing Strategy and Policy
- President has established the Office of
Manufacturing Policy to coordinate the federal
governments manufacturing programs. Office
co-chaired by Secretary of Commerce and Director
of the National Economic Council. - Presidents FY 2013 budget 2.2 billion for
federal advanced manufacturing RD. (19
increase over 2012)
An economy built to last demands that we keep
doing everything we can to.keep strengthening
manufacturing.
8Manufacturing Innovation
9Additive Manufacturing
- A production technique using 3D laser printing
and advanced materials to print out physical
products - While not new (20 years in the making), could be
poised to be the next real game-changer for the
manufacturing industry. - I understand that Airbus is even talking about
printing out most of an airplane someday.
10Crowdsourcing
- The act of outsourcing tasks, traditionally
performed by an employee or contractor, to a
large group of people or community, through an
open call. - Expect small to medium sized companies to apply
this technique (using the web) to solve tough
manufacturing problems - Motivationaccess wider array of talent, generate
better results, etc.
11Service Oriented Manufacturing
- Vision where everything in the product life cycle
is information driven and is encapsulated in
modular services. - Concept could enable a new class of
businesses---brokers who have service agreements
to rent excess capacity in manufacturing plants. - Rockwell Automation is looking at cloud/SOA as
the means for controlling factory operations and
extending into the supply chain.
12IMS Program
13IMS Background
- Industry-led, global, collaborative research and
development program providing the framework for
conducting international manufacturing research - Japanese initiative proposed in 1989 with a
vision of global industrial cooperation and
technology sharing - Feasibility study conducted in 1992 1994
formal program began in 1995 with seven
participating Regions - Structure consists of
- International Steering Committee (ISC) led by a
Chairman - Inter-Regional Secretariat (IRS)
- Head of Delegation for each Region
- Regional Secretariat in each Region
- ISC Chairmanship and IRS rotates every two years
(currently headed by the European Union) - World Manufacturing Forums on the future of
advanced manufacturing held periodically - Intellectual Property (IP) protected
14Why IMS? (Rationale)
- Recent advances in electronic networks make
global-level collaboration feasible and cost
effective - Environmental aspects of manufacturing and
consumption cannot be tackled on merely a local
or national level - Effective use of knowledge as a foundation for
addressing world-wide problems requires access to
all available knowledge sources - Manufacturing is no longer a national or regional
concern. Consumers are demanding a free flow of
products and services which requires a global
scope
While many countries have negotiated bi-lateral
agreements to conduct cooperative research, the
IMS charter takes this one step further --
facilitating global solutions to manufacturing
challenges on a multi-lateral basis.
15What is the IMS Vision?
- Enlarge and open world-wide markets
- Improve the utilization efficiency of resources
(sustainable) - Significantly enhance the quality of life in the
world community through new product creation - Enable greater standardization and sophistication
in manufacturing operations - Improve the quality of the manufacturing
environment and the global environment - Disseminate results of IMS projects and transfer
knowledge - Advance manufacturing professionalism
16Who are the Member Regions?
European Union And Norway
United States of America
Korea
Mexico
Switzerland
17The IMS Strategy
- What are the five Manufacturing Technology
Platforms (MTPs)? - Sustainability
- Energy Efficiency
- Key Technologies
- Standards
- Education
18The IMS Strategy
- What are the Requirements for an MTP initiative?
- Three or more participating Regions sign a
Memorandum of Agreement - Minimum resource / funding level of 1M
- Funding for meetings/workshops provided by each
partner or participating IMS Region - Minimum duration of 12 months
- Partners will meet a minimum of two times per
year - May meet in conjunction with the ISC meetings
19The IMS strategy provides a strong framework for
global cooperative research, facilitates quick
consortium formation and networking on a global
basis, and stimulates the broad dissemination of
information from these initiatives. Through
collaboration in the IMS program, we will
strengthen U.S. manufacturing and enhance the
quality of life of the world community.
Conclusion
20BACK UP SLIDES
21Manufacturings Multiplier Effect
Source U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, 2007
Annual Input-Output Tables
22The Public Supports Manufacturing
23The Public Supports Manufacturing
24A Renaissance in Manufacturing?
Manufacturing Jobs in U.S. (000s)
- Over 400,000 jobs added in the last two years.
- Major consulting firms issue reports predicting a
return of manufacturing from Asia.
25Manufacturing Jobs for Someone Else
The Manufacturing Institute Deloitte -
September 2011
26Manufacturing Jobs for Someone Else
The Manufacturing Institute Deloitte -
September 2011
27The Skills Gap in Manufacturing
- 82 of manufacturers report a moderate or serious
skills gap in skilled production. - 74 of manufacturers report that this skills gap
has negatively impacted their companys ability
to expand operations. - 69 of manufacturers expect the skills shortage
in skilled production to worsen in the next 3-5
years. - 5 of all jobs in manufacturing unfilled due to
lack of qualified workers.
The Manufacturing Institute Deloitte -
September 2011
28Manufacturers Need New Workforce Strategies
- Top sources for new employees
The Manufacturing Institute Deloitte - October
2011
29The IMS Strategy
1. Sustainability Sustainable manufacturing is a
platform for development of innovative
manufacturing technologies which address world
wide resources shortages and excess environmental
load to enable an environmentally benign life
cycle. 2. Energy Efficiency Energy Efficient
manufacturing is a platform for improving
efficiency and reducing the carbon footprint in
energy utilization for manufacturing and
operational processes. The energy efficiency
platform will result in reduced manufacturing
costs and global warming impact. 3. Key
Technologies Key Technologies is a platform that
includes those technologies that will yield a
high impact on the next generation of
manufacturing. These technologies include Model
Based Enterprise, nanotechnology, and Smart
materials.
30The IMS Strategy
4. Standards Standards is a platform that will
focus on manufacturing research issues that can
benefit from standardization to create open
manufacturing and product standards that are
accessible to everyone and enhance innovation
globally. IMS involvement in standards would
also focus on key areas where the lack of
standards is impeding progress in any of the
other MTP areas. 5. Education Education is a
platform for educational programs designed for an
information based knowledge worker environment
that supports manufacturing in the future.
Research listed under this platform will
contribute to the development of a coherent
vision of manufacturing education across the
whole vocational and professional community.
31The IMS Strategy
- Focus on Manufacturing Technology
- Platforms (MTPs)
- What are MTPs?
- Knowledge sharing platforms meant to
facilitate the exchange of information and
generate new ideas and research goals - What is unique about MTPs versus traditional IMS
projects? - Ongoing or new start Regional initiatives can
be integrated within an MTP and kicked off
under a simple Memorandum of Agreement -
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