Skip to main content

CECE Conference, Prague: Construction sector’s quiet revolution

The automotive sector is getting all the attention for its autonomous vehicle development, but the construction sector is quietly getting on with developing useable examples. Automotive original manufacturers, their supply chains and other groups such as Uber and Apple are in the limelight for their attempts to development self-driving vehicles.
October 6, 2016 Read time: 2 mins

The automotive sector is getting all the attention for its autonomous vehicle development, but the construction sector is quietly getting on with developing useable examples.

Automotive original manufacturers, their supply chains and other groups such as Uber and Apple are in the limelight for their attempts to development self-driving vehicles.

These groups get the general media attention and have much larger research and development budgets, according to Tomas Kuta, senior vice president of global sales for 7659 Volvo Construction Equipment.

But it is OEMs and their suppliers who are really pushing the envelope of innovation for autonomous vehicles, he told the delegates to the 3399 CECE Conference in the Czech republic’s capital Prague

More than 200 people from OEMs, agency officials and contractors are attending the three-day event that is focusing on the theme, ‘Industry Transformation: driven by success’.

“Autonomous vehicles with be the main driver for change,” he said in his presentation.

Kuta told World Highways that discussions with middle-to-large users of construction equipment, especially in the quarry sector, show that their main concern is now machine operator efficiency. The human element is where they see issues of efficiency that have to be controlled, he explained.

Issus include a driver or machine operator skills gap or simple shortage of personnel, safety concerns, wages and more. These are the variables that often are not controllable and autonomous vehicle development could help in this area.

Ladislav Rulf, manager of consulting firm 4137 KPMG’s Prague office, said the recent 2016 Construction Outlook confirmed the extent to which the sector is turning its attention away from only mechanical machine development and towards the digital worksite.

More than 40% of contractor respondents said they are using drones to capture visual and digital data from their worksite and machines to create a virtual overview of their operation.

Also, more than 60% are doing this with or without drones. Nearly a third of respondents said they are already using some form of robotics on their worksites.

The percentages have never been higher, Rulf told delegate, and they look like increasing.

Martin Knoetgen, president for Europe, Middle East and Africa operations at 695 Doosan, said OEMs should not forget that innovation is not just about mechanical and digital development. “It’s also about what we do as a business, our internal organisational structures and how we manage customer relations,” he said.

%$Linker: 2 Internal <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 2 29836 0 oLinkExternal Click here Visit WH website false /sections/eurofile/features/construction-sectors-quiet-revolution-for-digital-worksites/ false false%> to read a full report on the conference.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Track stand tactics take top honours
    January 5, 2015
    Cyclists and vehicle drivers may have their differences on the road but they can, nonetheless, admire each other’s skills. The ability of an articulated truck driver to back up while threading his lengthy vehicle through a narrow passage is often admired by cyclists. Drivers, too, can admire the ability of a cyclist at a stop light to balance his bicycle while stationary, without taking his or her feet off the pedals, a feat called the track stand.
  • Doosan launches new excavator
    January 6, 2017
    The new Doosan DX225LCA excavator being launched at Intermat has an operating weight of between 21.5 and 23.2tonnes, depending on the configuration. Its bucket capacity ranges from 0.39 to 1.28m3. It also has a digging depth of 6,620 mm, a reach of 9,900mm and a digging height of 9,750 mm.
  • Doosan launches new excavator
    February 21, 2012
    The new Doosan DX225LCA excavator being launched at Intermat has an operating weight of between 21.5 and 23.2tonnes, depending on the configuration. Its bucket capacity ranges from 0.39 to 1.28m3. It also has a digging depth of 6,620 mm, a reach of 9,900mm and a digging height of 9,750 mm.
  • HxGN 2015 Live! 3D machine control oils the wheels of success
    May 18, 2015
    Marco Cecala, president of Take-off Professionals, based in the state of Arizona, will show attendees to this year’s HxGN Live in Las Vegas how to make a project run like clockwork using Computer Aided Design – CAD – and data in field. Take-off Professionals has been preparing 3D models for clients for more than 15 years, riding the wave of modelling since its inception. Hexagon’s HxGN Live international users’ conference, from June 1-4, will be an event not to miss if 3D machine control is an essenti