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Article

An Equifinality Energy Management Framework in Terms of Benchmarking Practices and Expectations: The EnerMan Project Outlook

1
Maggioli S.p.A. Greek Branch, 15124 Athens, Greece
2
Centro Ricerche Fiat S.C.p.A., 10043 Orbassano, Italy
3
Depuy Unlimited, Johnson & Johnson, Loughbed, W774642 Ringaskiddy, Ireland
4
Infineon Technologies AG, 85579 Neubiberg, Germany
5
Stomana Industry S.A., BG-2304 Pernik, Bulgaria
6
ASAŞ Alüminyum A.Ş., Istanbul 34810, Turkey
7
Yiotis Anonimos Emporiki & Viomixaniki Etaireia, 12131 Athens, Greece
8
AVL List GmbH, 8020 Graz, Austria
9
Prima Electro S.p.A., 10024 Moncalieri, Italy
10
Prima Industries S.p.A., 10093 Collegno, Italy
11
Department of Applied Science and Technology, Politecnico Di Torino, 10129 Torino, Italy
12
3D New Technologies S.r.l., 10128 Torino, Italy
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Systems 2022, 10(1), 2; https://doi.org/10.3390/systems10010002
Submission received: 19 November 2021 / Revised: 15 December 2021 / Accepted: 21 December 2021 / Published: 24 December 2021

Abstract

:
Background: The Industry 4.0 wave is leading the changes in existing manufacturing and industrial processes across the world. This is especially important in the formulation of the smart-factory concept with an outlook to energy sustainable processes. In viewing and identifying the foundational elements of such a transformation, the initial conditions and current practices in a cross-sectoral manner is considered a first, yet crucial step in the EU-funded project EnerMan. Methods: In this paper, we identify and analyse the key common features and characteristics of industrial practices set in a perspective of similar and identical functions with a focus to three key energy areas: sustainability, management, and footprint. The examination of different industrial sector cases is performed via distributed questionnaires and then viewed under the prism of the equifinality state via a text-mining analysis approach. Results: identification of common themes and benchmarking of current practices in a cross-industry manner led to the creation of a common systemic framework within energy management related aspects, which is hereby presented. Conclusions: use of an equifinality approach in energy management practices should be further pursued to open up new methods of ideation and innovation and communicate systems’ design in tandem with each industrial set goals.

1. Introduction

The advent of the age of big-data and Internet-of-things (IoT) [1] supports an evidence-based approach towards minimising the energy footprint and better monitoring the energy management within a factory. Therefore, the organization, interaction and interdependence in a systems-oriented approach in the industrial domain is receiving more attention and shifts the interest to a holistic and dynamic point-of-view of the smart-factory layers and interpretations [2] including the cyber-physical [3] and maintenance [4] perspective. As most of the Industry 4.0 studies deal with technological or infrastructural aspects, with a few noticing the importance of social and human aspects [5,6,7], one of the main objectives towards the implementation and realization of the smart factory concept [8] is the resource productivity and efficiency of existing industrial setups in terms of energy. The existing practices and principles, as well as the importance of considering relationships and interactions both among the energy components of the factory [9] as a system within its environment, is becoming a crucial issue over the last years for the smart-factory layout [10].
The main outcome of this paper focuses on cracking specific challenges with respect to linking efficient energy management in smart manufacturing environments, in relation to energy consumption and costs minimization, as well as monitoring the environmental footprint of the relevant products. By developing an open equifinality-based framework, this study prioritizes strengthening open sharing of knowledge and cross-fertilization with other industries and their best practices and policies. This aims to produce new knowledge and advance existing one, ensuring a sustainable growth for the technological advancements that will be delivered by linking similar concepts and identifying commonalities in energy management themes in a cross-industry ecosystem.

2. The EnerMan Project

In an effort to homogenize the approach and provide an additional insight as far as energy sustainability aspects are concerned, the launch of the EU-funded project EnerMan (https://enerman-h2020.eu/ (accessed on 17 November 2021)(GA no. 958478) explores the energy sustainability concept as a three-aspect combination: energy consumption, energy cost due to the power grid electricity price and the environmental impact due to the production process of the consumed energy. By introducing an energy sustainability management system, the project aims to achieve a holistic and data-based view of the energy efficiency, energy use and consumption within the factory. The evaluation and demonstration of the EnerMan solution will take place across Europe in three different pilot categories with eight different use cases that focus on different, energy consuming industrial manufacturing sectors (food, metal processing, automotive manufacturing). In more detail, the pilots will showcase:
  • The appliances and industrial components manufacturing industry:
    Automotive manufacturing represented by Centro Ricerche Fiat in Italy;
    Automotive manufacturing represented by AVL List GMBH in Austria.
  • Food industry, represented by Yiotis Anonimos Emporiki and Viomixaniki Etaireia in Greece and
  • Metal manufacturing and processing industry:
    Aluminium industry represented by ASAS Aluminyum Sanayi Ve Ticaret Anonim Sirketi in Turkey;
    Titanium manufacturing for medical devices industry represented by Depuy Unlimited in Ireland;
    Iron and steel manufacturing industry represented by Stomana Industry SA in Bulgaria, and;
    Additive manufacturing for processing metal component, represented by Prima Electro S.p.A. (Società per Azioni) and 3D New Technologies S.r.l. (Società a responsabilità limitata) in Italy.
Further details about the expected pilots are shown in Table 1, provided hereinafter.
These factories can be viewed as different systems, based on their geographical and application fields, however their components in terms of energy factors may exhibit similar characteristics, therefore they can be viewed as “general systems”. This term belong to the general systems theory approach and research, a discipline whose subject matter is “the formulation and derivation of those principles which are valid for ‘systems’ in general” [11]. To address the dimensions of energy consumption, sustainability, and footprint comparison of similar and identical functions across the different sites participating in the EnerMan project will provide an initial benchmarking framework. This will allow an insight of where and how performance gaps related to energy management have been addressed and current practices conducted within the organisations participating. Moreover, it will provide a baseline of energy management actions set in the general and not specific context, that can be used as a guideline for future transitional efforts of existing practices within factories and their transcendence into smart ones.

3. Energy Investigation Areas and Current Practices

3.1. Energy Consumption

It is critical from the energy management coordination aspects point-of-view to have a view of the “pulse of energy consumption” [12]. This is best achieved through an effective and efficient system of energy monitoring and reporting [13,14]. Such a system should have the capacity to monitor energy consumption measurements and provide comparison metrics related to either the company goals or to some energy consumption related standard [15]. At a hypothetical level, this should cover each operation or production cost centre in the plant, but most facilities lack the required devices for metering purposes [16]. Most plants only meter energy consumption at a single point, where the various sources enter the plant. However, there are already remedy actions performed towards this end by installing additional metering devices (e.g., when steam system shutdowns or vacation downtime occurs). This and any future reporting scheme need to be reviewed on a periodical basis to ensure that only necessary material is being produced, that all required data are available, and that the system is overall efficient and effective.
Some of the operational efficiency aspects examined among the eight pilot sites include existence of energy audit on a regular basis, the availability of energy consumption data, use of automated energy anomaly detection features, temperature or other metric-dependent loads, site performance and existence of energy consumption information.

3.2. Energy Sustainability and Smart Manufacturing

Smart manufacturing offers new production advantages that come from the flexibility and productivity alignment offered by digital technology enablers. Smart manufacturing describes fully-integrated, collaborative manufacturing systems that respond in real-time to meet changing demands and conditions in tomorrow’s smart factory [17]. The principles behind this concept concentrate on embracing the data revolution, using technology to increase sustainable practices and upgrading the potential for people-driven processes through smart manufacturing strategies [18]. Smart manufacturing ultimately leads to sustainable manufacturing. This concept refers to all industrial activities from the factory (plant) to the customer including all in-between steps (i.e., resources and services that are connected to the manufacturing chain) [19].
The most consuming part in terms of energy and resources in the supply chain is the manufacturing stage. Therefore, implementation of the “design of manufacturing” approach is an important key to achieve sustainability goals [20]. To this point, sustainable manufacturing should be part of an organization’s strategy to promote better financial performance and at the same time fulfil any social, environmental and policy/regulations objectives set [19,21]. Therefore, in examining energy sustainability aspects in industrial manufacturing processes, we investigated the existence of data collection mechanisms, participation in energy efficiency networks and sustainability reporting features among the eight pilot sites.

3.3. Energy Footprint

Based on the fourth assessment report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (https://www.ipcc.ch/site/assets/uploads/2018/03/ar4_wg2_full_report.pdf (accessed on 17 December 2021)), and increasing requirements from retailers and shareholders, firms around the world are considering the extent of their carbon footprint, and the means to reduce these emissions (https://ec.europa.eu/environment/industry/retail/pdf/Issue%20Paper%206.pdf (accessed on 17 December 2021)). Energy management activities in general are gentler to the environment than large-scale energy production, especially when this is coupled with extreme events, such as the COVID-19 pandemic [22], and they certainly lead to less consumption of scarce and valuable resources. Time and energy management mechanisms have shown that they can substantially reduce energy costs and energy consumption. In parallel with an increased uptake of ISO 50001 certifications [23,24], tools and key performance indicators [25] have been developed to assess the overall quality of energy management systems. However, the current approaches often fail to consider the multi-perspectives of structural design, such as safety, environmental issues, and cost in a comprehensive way.
Commitments in environmental protection can be shown through the adoption of environmental legislation [26], promotion of energy projects [27] and software features to streamline utility-related processes and identification of billing and metering errors leading to early-stage decision-making [28], which critically influences the overall cost and environmental performance at the manufacturing stage [29].

3.4. Review of Existing Energy Management Solutions

In the framework of the preliminary analysis towards full commercial exploitation of EnerMan, a preliminary analysis of the competitors of the EnerMan’s solution, are hereby briefly presented.
The solution provided by Integrated Technologies Australia (ITA (https://integratedtechnologiesaustralia.com.au/energy-management/our-markets/energy-management-for-industrial-plants-and-factories (accessed on 18 November 2021))) involves three steps: (i) analysis and audit (analysing energy patterns and identifying areas to improve efficiency; (ii) implementing tailor-made solutions; and (iii) monitoring and improving (based on changing energy usage patterns). However, this solution is not in line with EU-based standards and regulations, does not provide environmental footprint mechanisms and does not include the deployment of a full simulation environment (e.g., digital twin) of the manufacturing system.
Advantech (https://www.advantech.com/industrial-automation/industry4.0/fems#my_cen (accessed on 18 November 2021)) delivers a factory energy management system (EMS). Through IoT technology, the factory EMS system provides the optimisation of energy supply and consumption to reduce CO2 emission and factory operation costs. The specific solution includes: (i) energy consumption visualisation system (air conditioning, lighting, power consumption); (ii) air compressor equipment and heat recovery ventilation system; and (iii) renewable energy and natural gas energy monitoring system. This solution, compared to the vision set by EnerMan, does not include any ‘intelligence’ in terms of proposing specific activities and applying predictive analytics to improve energy efficiency; it is mainly used as a monitoring tool.
In the specific field of digital twins, a handful of solutions is already available in the market: General Electric (https://www.ge.com/digital/applications/digital-twin (accessed on 18 November 2021)) has developed such systems for power plants; SIEMENS (https://new.siemens.com/global/en/company/stories/industry/the-digital-twin.html (accessed on 18 November 2021)) and BOSCH (https://blog.bosch-si.com/developer/how-digital-twins-boost-development-in-the-iot/ (accessed on 18 November 2021)) see that as a baseline for Industry 4.0; IBM (https://www.ibm.com/topics/what-is-a-digital-twin (accessed on 18 November 2021)) and ORACLE (https://docs.oracle.com/en/cloud/paas/iot-cloud/iotgs/oracle-iot-digital-twin-implementation.html (accessed on 18 November 2021)) have already started deploying such solutions for any IoT-based environment. However, none of these approaches have a special focus on energy management of manufacturing environments. Therefore, the EnerMan project aims to provide a thorough solution that will comprise efficient energy management mechanism; minimisation of the environmental footprint and AI-based predictive analytics to facilitate an accurate decision support system and the deployment of accurate digital twin-enabled environments that will enable the realisation of its services.

3.5. Equifinality in a Cross-Industry Framework: A State-Of-The-Art Investigation

Equifinality as a concept is gaining attention over the last years. A relevant search in electronic bibliographical databases (i.e., Scopus and IEEEXplore) yields specific examples including the correlation of the equifinality in open source software development [30] as well as knowledge sourcing in foreign-owned subsidiaries [31,32] and open innovation in the biotechnological cluster [33,34]. Restaurant firms, [35], circular economy industries [36] and apparel manufacturing [37] have also been examined Identification of the need for equifinal configurations in high technology industrial cluster [38,39,40], including dynamic configurations in the chemical industry [41], high performance in agribusinesses [42] and the specification of them in the airline industry [43].
However, narrowing down the search and analysis of results set in a cross-industry framework, we found out that there is minimal application of equifinality in a cross-industry setting apart from three studies which explored hypothesis theory within the equifinality concept. The first one was set to understand the IT capability configuration-innovation performance relationship with IT-fit capabilities in a large number of different industrial sectors [44]. In [45], business model innovation in manufacturing and service firms was explored under an equifinality approach and in [46] mineral, non-mineral and technological cluster industries were explored under an equifinality approach. While these three examples provide a foundation towards the research direction set in this study, they also highlight a research gap in identifying commonalities among different types of industries under a common equifinality approach framework, and more specifically one related to energy management practices. Table 2 summarises the findings of these results.

4. Methodology

A strategic benchmarking type of action [47] is considered to be of the most constructive nature for identifying such actions. Figure 1 shows the timeplan of the phases identified, along with the key goals related to each phase, which are hereinafter described in more detail.
In this study, a semi-structured questionnaire [48] was conducted from February to May 2020, comprised of three open-ended questions about benchmarking practices within industrial manufacturing premises, so as to guide the end-users towards describing the aimed themes (Table 3). Phase 1 and Phase 2 (Figure 1) concerned the definition and clarity on the goals set, as well as the nature of the questions, specific details, and assumptions as well out-of-scope processes.
The answers received were then qualitatively analysed and a hierarchical code system was designed in which higher level categories describe the answers in general terms (Phase 3 in Figure 1). This system approach was designed based on an iterative methodology where we revisited and refined the answers given: the most important answered were highlighted; those that were unclear or that were not considered relevant were ignored; some answers and/or concepts with similar meaning were merged. We then thoroughly analysed the answers by indicating their relevance, variations, dimensions and parameters [49]. Finally, to go beyond a simplistic descriptions level, we comparatively and relationally analysed the content to reveal the existence and strength of patterns of associations between the data elements. The results of this exercise are provided in Table 4, Table 5 and Table 6:

The Equifinality Aspect

The idea of equifinality suggests that similar results may be achieved with different initial conditions and in many different ways [50]. Given the difference in character among the investigated industries, an additional approach would be to check if and how they may establish similar competitive advantages based on substantially different competencies [51]. Moreover, it is suggested that “the social, economic, and environmental impacts of each process must be determined to identify the optimal course of action” [51]. To check the equifinality aspect of the industries involved in the EnerMan project, identification of commonalities in sustainable mission-driven goals (namely the energy consumption, sustainability and footprint practices deployed within their floors) under an unknown future (be it that of the project outcomes in terms of its expectations), should provide an indication of whether this is true or not across a multi-system approach.
As part of the use cases analysis questionnaire deployed for identifying the requirements and specifications of the EnerMan pilots, an additional section was also included to explore the aspect of equifinality via a set of open-ended questions set to address the expectations from each pilot site regarding the EnerMan project outcomes (parts of Phase 1 and Phase 2 in Figure 1). These questions were based on bilateral teleconference meetings held for these purposes. The agreed list of questions is shown in Table 7.

5. Results and Discussion

5.1. Results

Given the open format of the answers, a preliminary text-mining analysis was performed to identify qualitative context stemming out of the answers (Phase 3 in Figure 1). The main research item from these questions was to see if there are common themes pursued among the end-users and identification of common issues envisioned by them to address the issue of equifinality among different industrial environments.
For these purposes, a bag-of-words model approach [52] was followed for feature generation out of the answers given by each end-user. The most common type of features (or characteristics) calculated from the bag-of-words model is the frequency, namely the number of times a term appears in the text. Julia v1.4 [53] was used for programming a script (a link to the Julia notebook is provided as a footnote (https://nextjournal.com/EnerManD12textMining/enerman-d12-text-mining-analysis-for-expectations-related-answers (accessed on 18 November 2021))) (Phase 4 in Figure 1). The results are shown in Table 8. Figure 2 provides the diagrammatical representation of the same results.
As shown in Figure 2, the main terms reflecting the end-users’ opinion have to do with manufacturing related issues (e.g., “consumption”, “production”, “flow”), energy sources (e.g., “energy”, “air”, “water”) and data related characteristics (e.g., “real-time”, “data”, “digital”, “server”). However, and in order to obtain a better view of the end-users’ perspective, an n-gram analysis was performed to highlight the most commonly used bi-/tri- and quadra-grams (i.e., number of consecutive words found together in a sentence) to extract a meaningful interpretation of common trends. Table A1, Table A2 and Table A3 in the Appendix A show the first 15 results coming from that analysis. Terms highlighted with green colour confirm the trends appearing among partners as far the EnerMan application is concerned, with characteristic examples the need for “a central server” and “ML and AI algorithms”, while “flow rate measures”, “of the building” and “end-node meters” are of high importance as well.
Based on the previous results, a diagrammatic representation of the context level desired to be achieved by the EnerMan approach was drawn (Figure 3), as far as the end-users are concerned. Based on the text-mining analysis, data monitoring issues are of outmost importance and are highlighted by the context of the answers provided, followed by manufacturing processes optimization and improvements on existing resources management and allocation.
This is also aligned with the answers given in the specific question number 5 in Table 7 related to the KPIs. Table 9 shows a redacted version of the total answers given by the end-users in non-specific order and by removing partners’ identifiable information. As it is evident, data monitoring and measurements issues dominate the answers given in terms of Key Performance Indicators, thus serving as a driver for the upcoming build-up of the EnerMan system.

5.2. Discussion

In this point it should be highlighted that specific key and data metrics related to the practices followed by the pilot sites were not given respecting the terms of confidentiality imposed by them. However, this is not restrictive in terms of sharing several important insights into how organisations can employ energy-related information for energy management strategies at different stages of their present or future energy management strategy planning. These insights are hereinafter described.
Organisations in all levels of energy management positioning give a significant focus from an energy efficiency perspective, e.g., by using available and newly gathered information. This information is used for performing efficiency improvement decisions, evaluation of the plant performance and participation in sustainability projects. Despite the differences shown in how intensively the organisation use this information, they also intend to obtain other sustainability benefits such as mitigation of any environmental impacts, industrial energy usage, and carbon emissions. For example, adoption of the ISO 50001 standard is pretty common and provides a constant variable in terms of energy management practices.
However, due to the unavailability of systematic environmental monitoring data and recent use of energy management systems and their associated information collection and management mechanisms, the investigated organisations following reactive and preventive strategies do not exploit the full potential of energy efficiency strategies. For example, the option of using renewable energy sources is limited among the pilot sites, and such environmental management initiatives should be extended and promoted among both internal stakeholders and external stakeholders.
On the other hand, all organisations are found to actively pursue reactive and preventive strategies and have included this focal aspect in managing existing information. The investigated organisations follow a proactive strategy and attempt to be as transparent as possible in terms of energy information management and provision. However, even these organisations seem to lack a proper mechanism to integrate multi-tier suppliers into their network of energy management and related activities. Non consideration of AI- and ML-enabling technologies along with related strategies, would deny these organisations opportunities to further achieve low energy and low-carbon operations.
Thus, in terms of equifinality, a suggested framework within energy-related aspects, inspired by the means-end-chain model approach [54] covering both the states of expectations (as goals) and existing practices (as means) (Figure 4). The inter-systemic interactions are hereby highlighted with interlinks of varying thickness, so as to open up new methods of ideation and innovation and communicate a systems’ design in tandem with industrial set goals. As shown in the figure, G1: data monitoring was found to be of the outmost importance (depicted with the thicker drawn interlinks) to achieve the required status of energy consumption (M1) and footprint (M2) metrics within an industrial environment, while G2: process optimization comes second towards the fulfilment of both the energy footprint and sustainability (M3) profile to be achieved. G3: resources management is shown to affect only the energy footprint status, and that in specific cases (depicted with thinner drawn interlink), while an external source disruption (namely that of external audits) seems also to affect a number of industries within the energy consumption framework.
Although real-time implementation of data monitoring/management strategies is requested and/or expected by all industries, this is shown not to be actually taking place in terms of realizing them in terms of energy sustainability, consumption and footprint. To request or require such services (in terms of real-time monitoring). Therefore, the suggested framework acts as a scaffold on which they should base current and future activities especially in terms of all the aforementioned concepts, so as to interlink and recognize the impact of their energy-related activities with environmental metrics in real-time and in an evidence-based manner.

6. Conclusions and Future Work

The innovation delta offered by depicting energy related expectations and practices under a commonly understood framework, such as the one presented in the current study aims to provide the push to all energy management activities of the EnerMan partners but to external stakeholders as well. Identifying common themes and common-goal priorities under the same umbrella terms, intends to allow the effective and meaningful use of energy management information, which plays a crucial role in monitoring, measuring, and evaluating progress towards the achievement of sustainability and energy management goals not only on a corporate level, but on a decision-making and multi-stakeholder level as well.
The innovation value chain in the context of AI-based energy management solutions for Industry 4.0 environments is enacted by an open ecosystem of small and large industries, individual inventors, research institutes and universities. Large industries are experimenting with a variety of schemes to stimulate and benefit from entrepreneurial activities outside their organizations. Information gathering, and analysis is still in progress, but it appears that while the general philosophy of open innovation is shared, there is considerable variation in how it is interpreted and applied, and a consensus on best practice has yet to emerge, as highlighted in similar approaches (e.g., in [55,56]).
The EnerMan project aims to empower AΙ and digital twins to drive efficient energy management in smart manufacturing. The framework is very rich in innovative features. The envisioned operations incorporate (i) a novel self-learning distributed approach; (ii) a data- and knowledge-driven approach for digital twin manufacturing towards intelligent energy management in manufacturing; (iii) novelty in modelling algorithms and finally (iv) a novel, thorough industrial model-based management system to help humans to resolve unforeseen critical situations in smart factories towards (1) efficient production planning to reduce energy consumption, costs, and the relevant environmental footprints, (2) effective analysis and improvement of production processes towards the same direction. Environmental barriers affect organizational factors, which in turn have an impact on system integration, system and data security, and data quality [57].
With its associated companies, EnerMan will reinforce the power to innovate and the competitiveness of local businesses in particular by means of applied research of the suggested framework. At the same time, mutual exchange of experience and knowledge, cooperation in interdisciplinary teams and shared use of infrastructure creates a market-oriented and science-based process of innovation that benefits all the project partners involved. Interdisciplinary exchange improves competitiveness in an international context and guarantees that the very latest research findings are constantly incorporated into the framework. This gives a decisive edge to the project.
As far as future work is concerned and as far as the project progresses, a more elaborate insight on the framework relations will be explored, so as to indicate the variables and parameters on a micro-, and meso-scale the implementation activities on both an expectational and practical level. By fulfilling the goals set by the EnerMan project, a better glimpse will be given on the existing and future energy landscape at various industrial sectors, towards the realization and the transformation motions set by Industry 4.0.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, P.K.; methodology, P.K.; software: P.K.; resources, M.C., F.M., L.M., A.I., E.B., H.B.T., Z.T.Ö., İ.A.S., K.P., J.B., S.P., G.P., R.P., R.d.F., F.F.; writing—original draft preparation, P.K.; writing—review and editing, M.C., F.M., L.M., A.I., E.B., H.B.T., Z.T.Ö., İ.A.S., K.P., J.B., S.P., G.P., R.P., R.d.F., F.F.; The co-authors named in the resources, represent the end users of the EnerMan project and have provided input regarding the current practices followed within their industrial manufacturing premises and input for the definition and clarity of the goals set for the EnerMan project. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme under Grant Agreement No. 958478.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

Table A1. Bigram Analysis: First 15 Results.
Table A1. Bigram Analysis: First 15 Results.
BigramCountLog Likelihood
of the78230.7207
should be26166.5386
EnerMan solution14134.299
central server10121.5994
in order13107.1364
digital twins893.51045
energy consumption1791.33639
order to1389.84082
able to1389.84082
no answer777.76522
flow rate675.66086
target processes763.61579
based on763.20992
AI algorithms462.65131
from the2059.0126
Table A2. Trigram Analysis: First 15 Results.
Table A2. Trigram Analysis: First 15 Results.
3 gCountFrequency
in order to130.351351
be able to90.243243
of the target80.216216
of the process70.189189
the target processes70.189189
should be installed60.162162
the central server60.162162
the EnerMan solution60.162162
it should be60.162162
be installed in60.162162
EnerMan solution should60.162162
of the production50.135135
the temperature and50.135135
of the system50.135135
no answer energy50.135135
Table A3. The Four-gram Analysis: First 15 results.
Table A3. The Four-gram Analysis: First 15 results.
4 gCountFrequency
of the target processes50.135135
process in order to40.108108
should be able to40.108108
no no answer energy40.108108
ML and AI algorithms40.108108
should be installed in40.108108
on a central server40.108108
Bodyshop environmental air conditioning30.081081
environmental air conditioning system30.081081
to minimize energy consumption30.081081
of the target process30.081081
acquired from the field30.081081
dynamic parameters that are30.081081
parameters that are important30.081081
that are important to30.081081

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Figure 1. Timeplan of phases related to information acquisition for the study.
Figure 1. Timeplan of phases related to information acquisition for the study.
Systems 10 00002 g001
Figure 2. Most Frequently Used Terms from End Users Related to EnerMan Expectations.
Figure 2. Most Frequently Used Terms from End Users Related to EnerMan Expectations.
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Figure 3. Context-related Expectation Levels regarding EnerMan.
Figure 3. Context-related Expectation Levels regarding EnerMan.
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Figure 4. Approaching of Equifinality within the EnerMan project.
Figure 4. Approaching of Equifinality within the EnerMan project.
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Table 1. Description of the to-be-deployed EnerMan Pilots.
Table 1. Description of the to-be-deployed EnerMan Pilots.
Pilot CategoryUse Case OwnerUse Case Title
1
Appliances and industrial components manufacturing industry
Centro Ricerche Fiat (CRF)The painting process and body shop working area
AVL List GmbH (AVL)A testing factory for engines, powertrains and vehicles
Infineon Technologies AG (IFAG)An energy-optimized global virtual factory
2
Food industry
YIOTIS Anonimos Emporiki & Viomixaniki Etaireia (YIOTIS)Chocolate processing and manufacturing
3
Metal manufacturing and processing industry
Asas Aluminyum Sanayi Ve Ticaret Anonim Sirketi (ASAS)Autonomous trigeneration facility for aluminium industry
Johnson & Johnson Vision Care (DPS)Titanium and CoCr alloys manufacturing for medical device industry.
Stomana Industry SA (STN)Energy consumption in iron and steel manufacturing industry
Prima Electro S.p.A. (PE) & 3D New Technologies S.r.l. (3DNT)Additive manufacturing for processing metal components.
Table 2. Identified Studies Exploring Equifinality in Industrial Sectors.
Table 2. Identified Studies Exploring Equifinality in Industrial Sectors.
StudyIndustry SectorCross-Industry Paradigms
[31]Open-Source SoftwareNo
[31,32]SubsidiaryNo
[33,34]BiotechnologyNo
[35]Restaurant FirmsNo
[36]Circular EconomyNo
[37]Apparel ManufacturingNo
[38,39,40]High-TechnologyNo
[41]Chemical IndustryNo
[42]AgribusinessNo
[43]Airline IndustryNo
[44]Metal, Textile, Non- metallic Mineral, Printing, Computer and Electronic Products, Beverage and Tobacco, FurnitureYes
[45]Non-mineral Manufacturing, Mineral Manufacturing, Scientific and Technical ServicesYes
[46]Manufacturing (Electric equipment, Machine Manufacturing, Textile and Clothing, Pharmaceuticals) and Services (Hotel, Restaurant, Software Services)Yes
Table 3. Open-ended Questions Related to Benchmarking Practices.
Table 3. Open-ended Questions Related to Benchmarking Practices.
Energy Consumption Themed QuestionPlease describe any actions related to energy consumption practices, including but not limited to operational efficiency aspects: (e.g., energy audits existence, energy consumption processes data, use of automated energy anomaly detection features, temperature or other metric-dependent loads, site performance, existence of energy consumption information system).
Energy Sustainability Themed QuestionPlease describe any actions related to energy sustainability for industrial manufacturing practices, including but not limited to use of smart manufacturing data collection aspects, participation in energy efficiency networks, verification of energy savings, sustainability reporting features.
Energy Footprint Themed QuestionPlease describe any actions related to energy footprint, including but not limited to utility validation aspects (e.g., adoption of environmental legislation, continuous monitoring of peak load, software features to streamline utility-related processes, identification of billing and metering errors).
Table 4. Energy Consumption Related Practices.
Table 4. Energy Consumption Related Practices.
Pılot Site(Process-) Monitoring SystemExternal AuditsRecording, Visualisation, Analysis and Reporting System
ASASyesyesyes
AVLyesyesyes
CRFyesyesyes
IFAGyesyesyes
DPSyesyesyes
PEyesnono
STNyesnoyes
YIOTISnoyesyes
Table 5. Energy Sustainability Related Practices.
Table 5. Energy Sustainability Related Practices.
Pılot SiteImprovement Actions towards Smart ManufacturingParticipation in Sustainability Projects and NetworksImplementation and/or Adoption of New Practices and Strategies
ASASyesyesyes
AVLnoyesyes
CRFnoyesyes
IFAGyesyesyes
DPSnoyesyes
PEyesyesyes
STNyesyesno
YIOTISyesyesyes
Table 6. Energy Footprint Related Practices.
Table 6. Energy Footprint Related Practices.
Pılot SiteRenewable Energy Strategy ApproachEnergy Footprint ResearchExistence of Energy Management and/or Efficiency-Consumption Ranking Systems
ASASnoyesyes
AVLyesnoyes
CRFnonoyes
IFAGyesyesyes
DPSyesnoyes
PEnonoyes
STNnonoyes
YIOTISnoyesyes
Table 7. Questions related to EnerMan expectations.
Table 7. Questions related to EnerMan expectations.
Question Description
1How do you envision the EnerMan solution fit to your current manufacturing process (e.g., in terms of time-management, decision-support system, data availability, resources management)? Do you target a specific process or metric to be addressed?
2How EnerMan is expected to interact with those processes?
3Are there any environmental challenges related to the manufacturing process to which EnerMan will be applied, that you wish to address? Please provide a description
4What KPIs should be monitored in real-time?
5What reports should be automatically generated?
6Which part (if not the whole) of the process are you most interested in “digitally twin-ing” it?
7What dynamic parameters of the target process are important to be acquired and monitored from the field to “digitally twin-ing” it? (e.g., set-point temperatures and humidity, water flow rate in heater exchanger, air flow rate in fan, etc.)
8Which part (if not the whole) of the process are you most interested in receiving earlier warning/notifications and intelligent information/decisions about it?
9What are your expectations as far as the digital twin approach is concerned?
10In which part of the process (if not in the whole process) do you intend to use the EnerMan intelligent decision support system (IDSS)?
11Where will you install (if required) the EnerMan solution?
12Regarding the previous question, how interruptive do you think this will be in the usual manufacturing process (e.g., are there any user adoption issues foreseen)?
13Will someone from the team be assigned to use solely the EnerMan solution?
14What is your time saving estimations/expectations as far as human-driven processes are concerned?
15How do you intend to (re-)assign the personnel that might not be needed in case of a full setup and expected installation/running of the EnerMan solution?
Table 8. Bag-of-Words Results.
Table 8. Bag-of-Words Results.
#TermFrequency#TermFrequency
1energ5617abl13
2consumpt4718base13
3air2619condit13
4product2620run13
5data2221chang12
6temperatur2222collect12
7level2023heat12
8water2024meter12
9control1925target12
10digit1626central10
11flow1527oper10
12instal1528report10
13solut1529chiller9
14twin1530cost9
15manag1431refer9
16server1432tank9
Table 9. Redacted Answers to Question #5.
Table 9. Redacted Answers to Question #5.
Redacted Sentences from the Answers Given to Question #5
Real-time energy consumption
Water temperature used for cooling (chiller)
Flue gas analysis
Natural consumption/kwh
Steam ABS Chiller running performance
Engine oil cons/kwh
Hot water consumption/kwh
Steam consumption/kwh
Energy flows
Hot water ABS Chiller running performance
consumption in term of real-time power demand
Energy Consumption
kWh/per part
Market prices for load shifting
Air usage/kWh—and where is the air being used
COP chillers and COP heater and where is the chilled water/heat being consumed
Waste output
Real-time trend of the indoor air temperature of the building working area
Energy consumption of machines and clean room conditions.
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Katrakazas, P.; Costantino, M.; Magnea, F.; Moore, L.; Ismail, A.; Bourithis, E.; Taşkın, H.B.; Özen, Z.T.; Sarı, İ.A.; Pissaridi, K.; et al. An Equifinality Energy Management Framework in Terms of Benchmarking Practices and Expectations: The EnerMan Project Outlook. Systems 2022, 10, 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/systems10010002

AMA Style

Katrakazas P, Costantino M, Magnea F, Moore L, Ismail A, Bourithis E, Taşkın HB, Özen ZT, Sarı İA, Pissaridi K, et al. An Equifinality Energy Management Framework in Terms of Benchmarking Practices and Expectations: The EnerMan Project Outlook. Systems. 2022; 10(1):2. https://doi.org/10.3390/systems10010002

Chicago/Turabian Style

Katrakazas, Panagiotis, Marco Costantino, Federico Magnea, Liam Moore, Abdelgafar Ismail, Eleftherios Bourithis, Hasan Basri Taşkın, Zeynep Tutku Özen, İlyas Artunç Sarı, Katerina Pissaridi, and et al. 2022. "An Equifinality Energy Management Framework in Terms of Benchmarking Practices and Expectations: The EnerMan Project Outlook" Systems 10, no. 1: 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/systems10010002

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