Manufacturing And the Economy, According to Schneider Electric

At the beginning of 2011, manufacturing numbers were positive. But then the economy started showing signs of uncertainty.

Andy Gravitt, senior vice president of industry business at automation supplierSchneider Electric(www.schneider-electric.us), talked with Automation World Editor in Chief Gary Mintchell about what has been happening to the economy and Schneider Electric in particular.

格拉维特负责开发一个consistent and aligned strategy for Schneider Electric’s Automation and Process business, while overseeing Schneider Electric’s position in the solutions and services market in North America.
“我们是我们遇到了一个很好的一年in February at the ARC Forum,” Gravitt said. “The comparisons were great, but we were not back to 2007 levels, yet. In February, we were looking forward to continued growth. We had introduced PlantStruxure, MachineStruxure and Production Energy Optimization—taking our competencies and relating them around a unit of output. We were feeling good about 2011 then. We continued to see improvement in the Purchasing Managers Index (PMI). Then things became uncertain.”

“The first quarter was strong,” Gravitt said, “but then economic uncertainty made everyone nervous. The PMI has dropped from the 60s to low 50s back up to 56 or so. Not many jobs have been created. There has been some great performance, but much driven by outside the US.”

Gravitt noted that it seems like the U.S. recovery is sputtering a bit. There are the debt-ceiling issues, he said: “Even if they solve the debt situation, we won’t see a QE3 [quantitative easing by the U.S. Federal Reserve]. So there is probably a slower third quarter/second half,” he continued. “Customers are cautiously flexible. The falling dollar encourages exports. HVAC and machines are seeing export growth. We still see a lot of manufacturers moving closer to demand, and that is looking like [it’s going] overseas.”

So, what industries have opportunity right now? Gravitt sees opportunities in the metals, mining and minerals sector and also some comeback in automotive. Speaking of the latter, Gravitt said, “They need to update their installed base--it’s pretty ancient. We had a good year in water/wastewater last year, but the American Recovery Act has dried up. They pulled 2011 volume into 2010, so that affects us now.”

After many years of talking energy management, Schneider is surprised to see the topic going mainstream. Sustainability seems to be catching on, and Gravitt is seeing energy czars or energy directors coming on board at various companies. Manufacturers used to see energy as a fixed expense, but now they are seeing it as a variable (controllable) expense. He even hears some OEMs starting to talk about making a more energy-efficient machine as a way to entice some customers.

Schneider Electric(www.schneider-electric.us)

Gary Mintchell,gmintchell@automationworld.com, is Editor In Chief ofAutomation World.


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