FEATURED TOPIC – WASTEWATER
Core technology IFM EFECTOR IS ENSURING THE WASTE INDUSTRY IS PART OF THE TECHNOLOGICAL REVOLUTION. A team of technical experts will work with customers to understand what automation is available.
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y 2012, more than two billion people used the Internet, Cloud computing had entered the mainstream by the early 2010s and by 2020 about 67 per cent of the world’s population was connected, according to Internet World Stats. But while we’re no stranger to technology at our fingertips at home, often that doesn’t transpose into our work environment says Glenn Thornton, Product Manager for ifm efector. Glenn says there needs to be a change of mindset within the waste industry to be “digital ready”. “The term technology, in reference to waste, really requires some deeper exploration and understanding. Automation, Cloud connectivity, visualisation of process is synonymous
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with manufacturing and not often associated with the waste industry. But the scope of automation reaches all industries at all levels,” he says. ifm efector is a manufacturer of automation, process and communication sensing technologies. Glenn says the company incorporates its solutions with customer needs, focusing on overall process efficiency, productivity and reduction of downtime. In the wastewater industry, he sees a growing call for technology such as factory effluent monitoring and control, water authority automation reporting to the Cloud and farm irrigation management and control. “Every factory, it doesn’t matter what they are producing, has trade waste,” Glenn says “The risk from
having waste from a process is that it can end up in waterways and become an environmental issue. “We can monitor and measure trade waste from a processing plant with real-time connectivity allowing for key decision-making. By monitoring just one part of a plant, one valve that may be critical to the operation, it will create actionable insights for a customer.” Glenn says water authorities have valves controlling backflush filtering where clean water is forced under pressure back through wastewater filters. These valves must then close completely to stop wastewater entering local drinking water. Most valves have either no electrical connection or basic feedback. He says connecting the valves with the ifm MVQ101 via a process