Coronavirus pandemic advances the march of 'cobots'
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[July 20, 2020] By
Rajesh Kumar Singh
CHICAGO (Reuters) - While a resurgence in
coronavirus cases in Texas has brought many businesses to a screeching
halt, eight robots have kept All Axis Machining's metal fabrication
facility in Dallas humming.
The small, nimble robots perform multiple jobs, such as machine-tending,
sanding, deburring, part inspection and laser marking, leaving owner
Gary Kuzmin far less dependent on manual labor. When all the workers on
one shift went into self-quarantine last month, it had no impact on the
facility's productivity.
All Kuzmin had to do was to move a couple of workers from other shifts
to supervise the robots. "I have not lost any spindle time because of
the pandemic," he said.
Companies of all sizes are leaning on automation to keep factories
running without compromising the health and safety of their workers.
Half of the chief financial officers surveyed last month by
PricewaterhouseCoopers said they were planning to accelerate automation.
With the U.S. economy grappling with a double-digit unemployment rate,
however, industry's rush to robots will fuel worries about semi-skilled
or unskilled workers as low-paid, routine tasks become more likely to be
automated.
"It is the most productive thing for us to have the robots," said Kuzmin.
"I don't even look at a machine these days without thinking how I would
automate it."
Since August 2018, when All Axis Machining began using robots, its
productivity has doubled with the same headcount. If not for the robots,
the company would have needed to expand its staff of 30 by 50% to keep
up with increase in demand.
"We are less dependent upon a semi-skilled employee," said Kuzmin.
The pandemic has changed companies' calculations about investments in
automation, said Jeremie Capron, research chief at research and
investment-advisory firm ROBO Global. "The cost of operating without a
robot today in a factory is higher than it was pre-COVID," he said.
Mark Muro, senior fellow and policy director at Washington-based the
Brookings Institution, says the automation drive will result in a net
reduction in the workforce as companies invest in technology not just
for social distancing, but also to boost productivity and protect
profits from the pandemic-induced recession.
"Technology has improved and gotten cheaper, and the financial pressure
on companies is higher," he said.
He noted, however, that since middle class and lower-paid workers tend
to spend a larger share of their income than the higher-paid, it is
important that productivity gains eventually result in more jobs.
"If there is... too little sharing of the gains of automation-supported
growth, we will wind up with little economic activity," Muro said.
LOWER COST, FASTER PAYBACK
The affordable cost of the so-called collaborative robots, or "cobots,"
promises payback in months, making the changeover easier, even for small
and medium-sized enterprises.
All Axis Machining, for example, spent $85,000 per robot and was able to
recover the cost in five months. There are cheaper collaborative robots
on the market, as well.
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A collaborative robot, or cobot, places an item in a box at
California-based DCL Logistics facility in Freemont, California,
U.S. February 13, 2020. DCL Logistics/Handout via REUTERS
One of the most popular cobots sold by Denmark-based Universal Robots - a unit
of Massachusetts-based Teradyne Inc. <TER.O> and a market leader in
collaborative robotics technology - costs about $35,000, with a payback period
of three to four months.
The robots are very easy to use, safe to be around and can easily be adapted to
new tasks. It takes just hours to train employees to work with them, saving
companies huge training expense.
Although they are not suited for heavy-duty jobs, they are designed to work
alongside humans, making them the robots of choice in the age of social
distancing.
California-based DCL Logistics, a third-party logistics company, decided to
employ cobots to manage a 30% increase in orders in the immediate aftermath of
the outbreak.
Normally, the company would have hired temporary workers to deal with the surge
in orders. But bringing in new workers was fraught with safety risks, said Chief
Revenue Officer Brian Tu. The robots have led to a 300% increase in productivity
and a 60% jump in labor cost savings, Tu said.
DCL plans to deploy more cobots this year at its facilities in California and
Kentucky.
At All Axis Machining, the cobots have allowed owner Kuzmin to stagger the
shifts. The facility now runs three shifts seven days a week, with robots
working the late night shift alone, without any roving inspector.
This has allowed workers in the facility to stay 30 feet apart from each other.
Having seen the benefits, the company is automating its remaining machines as
well.
Kuzmin, who also runs a robotics services company, says several Dallas-based
manufacturers have approached him recently to install similar robots in their
factories.
ECONOMIC UNCERTAINTY
Universal Robots is fielding inquiries from companies seeking social distancing
solutions, as well as tools to re-shore production and make their operations
more flexible.
"Some companies... are talking about dozens and dozens of robots," said Joe
Campbell, senior manager of applications development at Universal Robots.
Still, the virus-induced recession is keeping many companies on the sidelines,
wary of making new investments.
Tacoma, Washington-based Tool Gauge, which makes metal and plastic parts and
assemblies for aerospace companies, including Boeing Co. <BA.N>, planned to add
two mobile industrial robots to its fleet of two cobots and 10 industrial robots
before the novel coronavirus hammered the aviation industry.
But Tool Gauge put the robots on hold after a production shutdown at Boeing's
Washington state factories and an overall drop in orders, General Manager Jim
Lee said.
(Reporting by Rajesh Kumar Singh; Editing by Joseph White and Dan Grebler)
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