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Syncron Tech participates at FBI Day 2023 (Forest-based Industries), which brings together professionals and students from the forest industry. The FBI Day will take place at Radisson Blu in Oulu on Wednesday, January 25, 2023 . This year, Oulu University's Process Engineering Guild organizes the event.
Syncron Tech participates at Energia 2022 Event, which is the main Event of Energy in Finland, 25-27 Oct 2022 in Tampere.
Until lately process industry has operated in an environment of reasonably predictable costs of energy. However, the recent turmoil in prices of natural gas and electricity is only adding to the impact of longer-term global trends in the energy markets, creating challenges to the industry.
At the moment, we are getting a lot of questions on this theme. How can the MES system improve the efficiency at the workstation under normal production conditions? How can the system support the employee during disruptions?
We expanded and opened a new office in Tampere!
Wind farms are being built all over Finland, perhaps with the exception of the easternmost regions, and solar power is gaining popularity, both among private households and on an industrial scale. At the same time, Fingrid is building new connections and substations. Grid energy storage is increasing at an accelerating pace, especially in terms of capacity. These developments are somehow linked.
Syncron Tech has released new software version SyncWare 13 New solutions for industrial and energy sectors. Syncron Tech has launched the latest version 13 of its production-boosting SyncWare software platform for the industrial and energy sectors. All Syncron Tech’s software products, e.g. SyncPlan, SyncMES, SyncPower and SyncIoT use SyncWare software platform.
It is likely that everything in the universe fluctuates. Up and down, forward and back. This also applies to the pace of manufacturing of industrial products, the production rate. In all processes. At times, the process comes to a standstill, then it is re-started and accelerated, reaching top speed, then overspeed. The process is slowed down, fast and slow speed changes are made, it runs at a crawl and stops. The process is then started again and accelerated. Why?
At power plants, the process data generated by control automation is widely collected and stored, but is the collected data utilised to its full extent?