and claims that one million industrial robots currently in operation
have been directly responsible for the creation of close to three
million jobs.
A statement from the International Federation of
Robotics asserts that the growth in robot use over the next five years
will result in the creation of one million high-quality jobs around the
world in industries such as consumer electronics, food, solar and wind
power, and advanced battery manufacturing.
“The German and Japanese automotive manufacturers who
have invested heavily in automation and robots have maintained a lead in
the quality market”
The report highlights that
between 2000–08, manufacturing employment increased in nearly every
major industrialised country, even as the use of robotics increased
sharply.
This same pattern is now being seen in China, Brazil, and other emerging countries as they increase their use of robotics.
In
Brazil, the number of robots almost quadrupled during the study period
with production and employment rising by more than 20 per cent.
The
report’s author, Peter Gorle, highlighted three critical areas of
growth in robotic deployment: where robots carry out work in areas that
would be unsafe for humans; where robots carry out work that would not
be economically viable in a high-wage economy; and where robots carry
out work that would be impossible for humans.
Odense, Denmark, is cited as a relevant illustration of robots saving jobs in high-wage countries.
Shipbuilding
in Europe has been in steep decline over the last two to four decades,
but robots have reportedly been key to efficiency savings at the Odense
Steel Shipyard in Denmark.
The company is said to have invested
in an autonomous, robotic arc welding system that has yielded big
dividends. Odense Steel Shipyard has increased productivity by a factor
of six when compared with manual welding, speeded up production time and
made quality improvements, while also protecting the jobs of qualified
welders.
The report concluded that the growth of high-tech
industries such as the electronics and semiconductor sector, and the
pharmaceutical sector, was significantly assisted by robots providing
the required quality, precision, speed and traceability that cannot be
achieved manually.
The report’s authors studied companies with
more than 250 employees in sectors including automotive, electronics and
plastics. Respondents were drawn from Brazil, China, Germany, Japan,
Korea and the USA — countries considered representative of the global
economy.
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