Skip to main content

Caterpillar’s senior executives outline the group’s drive for greater overall efficiency

Caterpillar senior executives Edward Rapp and David Bozeman have pinpointed “systems integration” as one of the equipment giant’s future targets. Speaking at Conexpo 2014 this week, Edward Rapp, Caterpillar group president said that the introduction of Tier 4 Final engine technology has been a landmark moment for Caterpillar but added that emissions systems are not the answer in themselves to improved performance. “The secret sauce is not the Tier 4, it’s the systems integration” said Rapp.
March 6, 2014 Read time: 4 mins
Caterpillar group president Ed Rapp and senior vice president Dave Bozeman spoke about the firm’s long term plans
178 Caterpillar senior executives Edward Rapp and David Bozeman have pinpointed “systems integration” as one of the equipment giant’s future targets. Speaking at Conexpo 2014 this week, Edward Rapp, Caterpillar group president said that the introduction of Tier 4 Final engine technology has been a landmark moment for Caterpillar but added that emissions systems are not the answer in themselves to improved performance. “The secret sauce is not the Tier 4, it’s the systems integration” said Rapp.

For Rapp, the firm’s recently launched hybrid excavator provides a good example of the way the various systems work together. “It’s the integration of the components that makes the machine work.”

While CAT’s hybrid excavator on show at Conexpo 2014 is a Tier 4 compliant model, the company is also able to offer this machine with a Tier 2 engine for lesser regulated markets.

According to Rapp, “if you look at fuel costs in emergent countries they are often higher than in the US.” And, he added, higher fuel costs will accelerate the payback time and increase the attractiveness of this technology to the customer base. For the moment, the hybrid excavator is still offered alongside a standard excavator but, he added, “There may be a day when the hybrid is the standard.”

“Tier 4 has been the most significant technological development Caterpillar has ever put across the board. Never before, have we had to introduce a technology across the whole product line at the same time … and during a global downturn.”
Looking ahead to the next set of emissions targets Rapp said that “if you look at the Tier 4 product, it is a very low emission technology.” In some urban applications, he added, the machines may actually produce cleaner emissions than the intake air. He wants the regulators to consider carefully the implications of any new targets too.

“I would hope they would look at the costs versus the benefits,” he said, adding that in many respects it would be more efficient to look beyond the machines themselves and consider the overall way in which they are used, as well as the way each contractor operates to cut overall fuel consumption.

Improving efficiency goes far beyond addressing fuel consumption and addressing productivity is another challenge for the company. Rapp said that many industries have boosted productivity over time, “… but if you look at construction productivity, it has not increased over time.”

According to Rapp, “we’ve invested a lot to make a very average operator a good operator.” He said that he recently drove a number of Caterpillar machines, including a skid steer loader, a dump truck and an excavator, and that after some instruction he was able to carry out a job of work. “I could go from machine to machine and dig a trench, push a load … or whatever.”

Machine control technologies provide a good base on which to improve efficiency for contractors and Rapp said that Caterpillar’s close partnership with 2122 Trimble over the last 20 years has reaped major rewards. However, machine control systems have yet to achieve a significant market penetration, even in developed markets such as North America and Europe. He said, “We’re in the early innings and adoption has been slow. If you look at the contractors that have gone in early they’ve made great strides.”

Improving the firm’s internal efficiency is another key strategy and this is a task being handled by David Bozeman, senior vice president at Caterpillar. He said, “We haven’t been at our most optimal in the last years.”

The cyclical nature of the construction industry makes forward planning difficult.

Downturns cost, something Bozeman is keen to address. “Our big challenge is that we’re in a cyclical industry - so how do we respond to that? As we see down cycles come we want to be able to Brake before they hit and ramp up when we need,” he said. “You’re never going to be able to forecast you’re way out of those cycles but we’re dampening that stream.”

Looking further afield, Rapp said “about 10% of our sales in China now come from online lead generation.”
%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 2 12692 0 oLinkExternal www.caterpillar.com Visit Caterpillar Website false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=12692 false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • The doors open on a record-breaking bauma China 2018
    November 22, 2018
    You can tell a lot from numbers – and this year’s bauma China exhibition is set to be a record-breaker! The exhibitor numbers represent an impressive 11% increase on the 2,958 exhibitors from 41 countries that presented their products and innovations to around 170,000 visitors at the 2016 event.
  • Student invents hologram road signs that ‘pulse’ at drivers
    June 5, 2013
    A British student hopes his new hologram road signs which ‘pulse’ at drivers will lead to a revolution in the way motorists are given information on the roads. Nottingham Trent University (NTU) undergraduate Charles Gale has already obtained a patent for his design and is set to meet with transport officials to discuss how it could be used across the UK.
  • Advanced asphalt plants being developed
    April 7, 2017
    The Fayat Group is developing its asphalt plant range with its Marini-Ermont product offerings - Mike Woof writes The Fayat Group is a major player in the global asphalt plant sector with its Marini and Ermont brands and is further developing both product ranges. The latest machines have been designed to cater to a wide array of customer needs, from large, fixed high-production plants to its compact super portable units, as well as from high sophistication down to more basic technology for developing mar
  • Volvo CE’s greener engine-ering
    January 6, 2017
    Volvo Construction Equipment (VCE) was one of the first manufacturers to market with its Stage IIIB compliant engine powered machines. According to VCE, the past 12-months has seen their customers clock up over 1.9million accumulated hours using its IIIB compliant engines in company machines including D-Series excavators, F-Series articulated haulers and G-Series wheeled loaders. Anders Larsson, executive vice president for technology at VCE, says: “We took a courageous decision to launch our Stage IIIB com