PECM Issue 36 2019 | Page 74

CONTROL & AUTOMATION INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION EU HOW THE PHRASE WE LOVE TO HATE IS CHANGING PEOPLE’S JOURNEYS WORLDWIDE Little did the three scientists who invented the phrase Industry 4.0 know that the term would become such a global phenomenon just a few years later. However, the resulting global drive to digitalise has been fragmented, with different countries using differing phrases for activities contained within Industry 4.0. Here, Jonathan Wilkins, marketing director at EU Automation, explains why, far from being an issue that divides us, these journeys symbolise the inception of the Fourth Industrial Revolution. In many ways, it was a trade fair like any other. Except it wasn’t. It was Hannover Messe; the world’s largest exhibition of industrial technologies. As well as being home to thousands of stands exhibiting the latest and greatest developments in areas such as automation, controls, power and renewable energy, the trade show hosted the launch of the phrase Industry 4.0. 74 PECM Issue 36 THE BEGINNING Three engineers held a press conference at Hannover Fair in April 2011 to tell the world about their new vision: Industrie 4.0. Here, Dr Henning Kagermann of the National Academy of Science and Engineering (acatech), Dr Wolfgang Wahlster of the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI) and Dr Wolf-Dieter Lukas from the Federal Ministry of Research and Education, explained that being able to assert oneself as a production location in a high-wage region is increasingly becoming a key issue in global competition. They said that one of the reasons why Germany has been so successful at mastering the economic effects of the financial crisis is because of the development and integration of new technologies and processes. Going forward, this means getting ready for the, internet-driven, Fourth Industrial Revolution. THE PACE OF CHANGE Where the First Industrial Revolution used water and steam to power mechanical manufacturing, the Second used electricity for mass production. The Third used electronics and information technology to automate and now a Fourth Industrial Revolution is using digital technologies to characterise a fusion that is blurring the lines between the physical, digital and biological worlds. The interesting thing is that, although the revolutions themselves are nothing new, what is changing is the speed at which they are occurring. The First lasted around 80 years, the Second lasted around 44 years, the Third lasted 31 years and the Fourth started less than a decade ago.