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With inflation an ongoing and worldwide concern, combined with technology advances coming as fast as they are, the construction industry is always looking to the latter to solve the issues caused by the former. In this feature, ConExpo organisers the AEM explores the rise – and optimisational importance – of telematics…
Construction equipment has undergone a technological transformation over the past decade, resulting in significant improvements in productivity, efficiency, safety and environmental impact.
A newly published whitepaper by the AEM, entitled Benefits of Construction Equipment Technologies and their Impact on Society, explores four key equipment advancements, namely machine & grade control, engines & drivetrains, digital control systems and machine telematics.
Over the past 30-plus years, those four advancements (among many others) have led to a 79% reduction in worksite injuries, an 83% reduction in worksite fatalities associated with equipment, a 96% reduction in NOx and particulate emissions per gallon of diesel fuel consumed and a 13% reduction in CO2emissions per machine hour.
The technological transformation has also brought about game-changing improvements in equipment performance, allowing construction companies to complete projects faster and more accurately. That produces a win-win-win for construction companies, the environment and society as a whole.
Knowledge is power
Everything starts with machine telematics, which is a set of technologies used to remotely track, monitor and optimize machinery assets.
Like any technology, telematics has continued to evolve over the past decade. Enabled by other technologies such as GPS tracking and satellite positioning, high-bandwidth internet connectivity, smart sensors, advanced imagery, advanced computation, networking and cloud computing, the potential of telematics has grown exponentially in recent years.
“Things have evolved from knowing where a piece of equipment is, to knowing what that piece of equipment is doing,” said Mike Granruth, director of business development at AEM member company Trimble. “That type of information empowers not only those in charge of managing equipment, but also those who manage jobsites and the business as a whole. It all ties to the concept of executing a project that is on time and on budget, and that it’s all done safely.”
Telematics can also help automate some tasks an equipment manager has to perform. A practice known as geofencing is a good example.
“Geofencing allows managers to set alarms and generate alerts when a machine reaches a certain area,” said Ted Polzer, director of product and customer support for North America at AEM member company Case Construction. “Managers can even set up geofences around areas they don’t want a machine to be able to access.”
Given that functionality, geofencing can help enhance not only safety and security, but also environmental impact.
“Say there is a low marshland near a construction site,” Polzer said. “The project manager wants to remind the crew that they shouldn’t go anywhere near that. Setting up alarms and alerts based on geofencing around a sensitive area helps managers take any necessary corrective action with operators.”
As telematics continues to mature, it continues to improve and gain additional functionality. Telematics is beginning to encompass additional data-gathering sensors, such as how much fuel or diesel exhaust fluid (DEF) is in a machine.
Think about a piece of equipment that is left at a jobsite overnight. The crew shows up the next morning, only to discover that the equipment is low on DEF. “With telematics, those types of needs could be picked up prior to starting the day,” Polzer said. “Having that kind of visibility into equipment is a huge time-saver.”
When construction companies save time, they also save money—and that can have an indirect impact on society.
“We like to talk about ‘cheaper, faster, better, greener,’” Granruth said. “The construction company wins, and so does the consumer. Labor and other project costs are reduced. Roads aren’t closed as long. Taxpayer dollars are saved on public projects. And, of course, carbon footprint is reduced as a result of being more efficient.”
Driving fuel savings
To further reduce carbon footprint, telematics is also helping construction companies slash fuel consumption. When telematics is leveraged across all equipment in a construction fleet, millions of gallons of diesel fuel can be saved each year in North America.
“Without telematics, managers don’t have the machine visibility they need to put procedures in place and change operator behavior,” Granruth said. He’s referencing bad habits like allowing a machine to excessively idle, which is hard on an engine and aftertreatment system. Idling also wastes a lot of fuel. In fact, it is estimated that 10-30% of the fuel consumed by construction equipment is nonproductive idling. By leveraging telematics, nonproductive idling could be reduced by 10-15%, on average.
Granruth has worked with a large fleet that did even better than that. The fleet typically consumed 30,000 gallons of diesel fuel per week. By better managing idle time, the fleet has been saving around 6,000 gallons of fuel per week (20%). Assuming a price of $4.18 per gallon, that equates to over $25,000 saved per week. Assuming 50% utilization, that equates to $650,000 in savings per year.
The reduction in carbon emissions has been just as impressive. “This fleet is saving 134,630 pounds of CO2 per week,” Granruth said. “That’s approximately 55 round trip flights from New York to Los Angeles each week.”
Across the entire North American construction industry, the fuel saved from reducing nonproductive idling is equivalent to flying around the world 800 times. The data makes it clear. Leveraging telematics to reduce nonproductive idling is a huge opportunity from both a financial and environmental standpoint.
Construction companies are reducing fuel consumption and carbon emissions in other ways, too. Polzer pointed to equipment utilization and jobsite efficiency.
“Once you back out all of the time a machine spends idling, a good equipment manager can start to get a handle on whether or not certain equipment is even necessary,” Polzer said. Perhaps a site could have functioned just fine with one less loader. On the other hand, maybe the excavators weren’t keeping up with the haul trucks. The equipment manager might want to add more excavators, or perhaps upgrade to larger machines.
Better maintenance, greater efficiency
When equipment managers have better visibility into how their machines are operating, they can also improve the maintenance of those machines. This, too, can produce a win-win-win result.
“Historically, preventive maintenance on equipment has been driven by engine hours,” Granruth said. “Being able to monitor that remotely allows equipment managers to be much more timely with their maintenance.”
“You can never eliminate downtime because maintenance still needs to happen,” Polzer added. “But telematics helps an equipment manager pick a good time to schedule it when the downtime will be least impactful.”
Telematics also has fault code functionality. Various sensors monitor if the engine and other machine components are working correctly. Telematics allows this monitoring to be done remotely, helping equipment managers avert unplanned downtime by scheduling service when disturbing fault codes emerge. All of this helps keep equipment running in peak condition, which helps keeps projects on track.
Now a concept known as “predictive maintenance” represents the next frontier of machine telematics.
“Preventive is simply about scheduling routine maintenance,” Granruth said. “Predictive is about actively monitoring how the machine is performing to determine which maintenance needs to be done, and when.”
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