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International Packaging Conclave a success

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The 2012 International Packaging Conclave brought together 110 participants – including managers from some of the most prominent end-user companies in the food and beverage and pharmaceutical industries
The 2012 International Packaging Conclave brought together 110 participants – including managers from some of the most prominent end-user companies in the food and beverage and pharmaceutical industries

The 2012 International Packaging Conclave in Greater Noida, India brought together 110 participants – including managers from some of the most prominent end-user companies in the food and beverage and pharmaceutical industries.

The 2012 International Packaging Conclave focused on its theme ‘Integration and collaboration across the packaging value chain’ and provided an interactive platform for panel discussions and case studies.

Together, speakers and participants addressed the potential for improved productivity, sustainability, OEE and ROI in the packaging industry.

Bryan Griffen, electrical and automation engineering manager at Nestlé and chairman of the OMAC Packaging Workgroup (OPW), spoke about the key benefits that embracing a technology standard like PackML could bring to end users, OEMs and system integrators.

Griffen recalled Nestlé’s realisation that dictating a single automation supplier for an entire packaging line is neither practical nor feasible, and that the best results are obtained when machine builders use the technology that best suits their needs. “Griffen says, “We still need to be able to integrate these machines to create a functional packaging line.”

OMAC guidelines like the PackML standard establish functional specifications and preferred suppliers rather than proprietary brand specifications. This gives machine builders the freedom to select whatever technology best meets their requirements, while allowing end users to easily and fully integrate the machines on the line. “By going with international standards like PackML, you can get consistent information and a common look and feel over installed lines as well as new installations, even using disparate automation technologies,” concluded Griffen, inviting his fellow Packaging Conclave attendees to become corporate members of OMAC and join him on the OMAC Packaging Workgroup.

Maurizio Tarozzi, global technology manager for Packaging Solutions at B&R, explained how openSAFETY, the first open and the only bus-independent safety standard for all Industrial Ethernet solutions, can take packaging line integration and effectiveness a step further by presenting a case study featuring a complete beverage line for filling water into plastic bottles,

Tarozzi illustrated how openSAFETY is able to transfer safety data such as E-stop button activation, light curtain violations, etc. between disparate PLC technologies used throughout a single packaging line.


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