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Collaborative robots help bridge the skills and automation gap

Widely embraced as a means for increasing productivity and efficiencies

As the demand for local manufacturing and increased productivity continues to surge, some manufacturers are grappling with an ongoing issue: a shortage of skilled labour. 

In fact, one of the top challenges faced by manufacturers remains the gap between demand and the availability of workers who have experience as robot operators, engineers, programmers, and maintenance technicians to keep factories running.  

Research by RMIT and Deloitte Access Economics indicate that “Australia is in the grip of a skills gap which could cost the economy $10 billion in growth over the next four years.”  

First introduced more than a decade ago, collaborative robots (cobots) were designed to help increase productivity and efficiencies. Rather than replacing human workers, they’re being used as a means to add value and work alongside humans.  

James McKew, Regional Director for Universal Robots Asia Pacific says that while in the past collaborative robots (cobots) and industrial robots have come up against resistance by their human counterparts, today, they’re being widely embraced by the workforce.  

“Important to remember is that Australia and New Zealand have some of the highest labour rates in the world, so naturally, optimising processes and using skilled labour where they are most valuable makes sense. While some are still of the opinion that automation is costing jobs, automation is in fact creating jobs and enhancing productivity”, 

“Sought after skills are hard to come by – especially when factoring in emigration and the price tags associated with local labour.” 

He adds that cobots are one of the easiest forms of automation to deploy. “They help reduce the skills gap because your existing employees can program, operate, and maintain them with no previous experience. The out-of-box experience for an untrained operator to unpack a cobot, mount it, and program the first simple task is typically less than an hour.” 

Rather than taking jobs away, McKew believes that cobots allow employees to focus on more meaningful tasks that will deliver greater value to the business and its bottom line. “Cobots are specially designed to tackle dull, repetitive and sometimes dangerous processes”, he explains.  

Factoring COVID-19 lockdowns and restrictions into the equation, cobots can be used in areas where social distancing and lockdowns continue to hamper productivity.  

Bridging the Gap 

The skills gap shrinks if you can reduce your need for outside integration resources or trained internal experts. In terms of deploying cobots, McKew believes that almost anyone can do it.  

“Free online training from the UR Academy helps current employees become successful cobot programmers and integrators in less than 90 minutes. Eight short interactive modules cover all the basics of robot logic, set-up, programming, interfaces, and safety”,  

“Once they’ve mastered the basics, your employees are ready to implement advanced cobot applications in the future. Experienced employees can use information on the Universal Robots support website to add sophisticated programming and interfaces to meet specific application needs.” 

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