ABB has released a white paper entitled ‘The DCS of tomorrow: ABB’s process automation system vision‘, which outlines how process automation systems will evolve to support industries as they undergo digital transformation and shift to sustainable energy sources.
For nearly 50 years, the DCS – a digital platform for automating and operating large plants – has helped enable safe, efficient and reliable 24/7 operations for process and energy industries.
Active in DCS for 22 years, ABB maintains a share of around 20% in a market worth more than US$14bn.
At the core of controlling and supervising complex processes, the DCS will, according to ABB, continue to provide the essentials needed for safe and reliable operations, while evolving its functionality to serve the needs of accelerating digital transformation and energy transition.
It will combine an ability to scale and serve new market conditions by adapting to new technologies, including the provision of standard interfaces for third-party connectivity.
ABB said it foresees a modular automation architecture that will evolve to address customer needs, becoming more open, interoperable and flexible, while maintaining a high level of reliability, availability, safety and security.
According to the white paper, the DCS of the future will be embedded in a digitally-enabled environment that facilitates enterprise-wide secure connectivity and collaboration among people, systems and equipment.
What’s more, new business models will be feasible through readily downloadable application subscription services, and machine learning and artificial intelligence will speed issue resolution and promote remote, autonomous operations that keep people out of harm’s way and mitigate against human-induced error.
Additionally, the generation joining the workforce will leverage the familiar benefits of digitalisation without having to sacrifice the reliability, availability and security that current systems provide.
“With the DCS of tomorrow, we will accelerate innovation while maintaining the reliability and continuity for which we are known,” said Peter Terwiesch, president of ABB Process Automation. “This white paper is a blueprint for automation systems that will future-proof industries for decades to come.
“Many of the industries we serve are energy and material intensive, and strive toward more sustainable production. As they increasingly integrate renewables into their energy mix, we will provide the automation with which to do it.”
ABB’s distributed control systems combine process control, electrical control, power management and safety management. They are designed to act as a collaboration enabler and allow for improvement of engineering efficiency, operator performance and asset utilisation.
“ABB automates, electrifies and digitalises some of the largest and most critical operations in the world to meet the needs of our growing society, helping our customers make a world of difference,” said Terwiesch.
“These sophisticated, interconnected systems work in the background, and yet are essential for nearly everything we use in our daily lives. Our future automation offerings will continue to be at the heart of this.”