As one of the world’s leading suppliers of products, services and solutions to the process industries, Emerson Process Management has begun to take a serious look at the future of the industry in terms of sustainability. In a recent interview with ProcessOnline, the many ways the company is adapting to the global changes that are forcing companies to become more environmentally aware were discussed.
Why is sustainability important within the process engineering sector?
Sustainability is important in any industry, but it is particularly important to the process engineering sector, which serves many heavy industries, such as oil and gas, refining, power, chemical and mining. Due to the nature of many of their processes, these industries are increasingly putting more focus on sustainability and are continually working to reduce their impact on the environment.
What are companies doing to become more sustainable?
The process industry is focusing more and more on sustainability and companies today are actually reporting on sustainability measures and tracking how they’re improving. Many companies now have detailed plans for how they will address sustainability and environmental impact, including:
What are the latest developments in wireless technology?
While wireless technology itself is not new, wireless sensor networks (WSNs) are. One of the latest developments is the release of the WirelessHART standard in September 2007, which uses self-organising mesh technology and has significant advantages over other point-to-point based wireless solutions. The WirelessHART standard is based on time synchronised mesh protocol (TSMP) and uses IEEE 802.15.4 radios with channel hopping.
One of the biggest benefits of WirelessHART is that it is tolerant to almost all interference and can coexist with other wireless networks that customers already have in the plant. WirelessHART allows networks that are highly scalable and capable of one-second scanning with low latency. Wireless devices based on this technology, such as Emerson’s Smart Wireless, are inherently more reliable for this reason. They offer the highest reliability of all wireless solutions — over 99% — because when one communication path is disrupted or fails for any reason, the network automatically finds another path to carry the message. These reliability levels have been proved in a wide variety of process plants worldwide, including plants in Australia and New Zealand.
The wireless sensor network, or field network, can also be seamlessly integrated into a wireless plant network utilising industrial wireless networks to extend and manage the flow of information around the plant. Advancements in wireless technology give customers the ability to address problems and issues they never thought were possible to address before.
Do these advances help companies become more efficient?
Wireless advancements can definitely help customers become more efficient. Even though advancements in digital communications have allowed customers to make changes in the performance of their business over the last decade, there are still many untapped opportunities to reach new levels of process and business performance. Examples include:
There are numerous examples of customers achieving operational efficiency improvements by implementing wireless technology:
How can WSNs improve power load management?
Wireless opens up a tremendous opportunity for power load management. Pumps, compressors, fans and other high horsepower equipment are tremendous energy consumers in plants. Today, due to the high infrastructure cost of wiring (up to 90% of the cost of a measurement is the cost to engineer and install the wiring and host connections), the power consumption of this equipment is generally not monitored, or only monitored locally or offline. Wireless breaks this economic paradigm and gives us the opportunity to see, on an equipment-by-equipment basis, the energy-efficiency winners and losers.
Where does Emerson Process see itself in the next five years with regards to sustainable process engineering?
Emerson is approaching sustainable process engineering in three ways:
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