Tuesday 7 July 2009

REMATEC exhibition in beautiful Amsterdam

I am writing this article having recently returned from the REMATEC exhibition in the beautiful city of Amsterdam. Having seen a marked decline in other trade shows this year, it was very refreshing to see how buoyant this event still is, reflecting the healthy state of remanufacturing in general.

So why are remanufacturing equipment suppliers and contractors bucking the global manufacturing downturn? Recent studies suggest that there are over 70,000 remanufacturing companies in the USA alone, turning over $50 billion per annum. The market is huge, encompassing automotive, aerospace, marine, electronics and many more sectors too numerous to mention.

The first answer is clearly to do with cost savings. With budgets everywhere under pressure, the cost of remanufactured goods is 40 – 60% less than new. And such is the quality on offer that it is often difficult to tell the difference between new and remanufactured products. When you throw in the fact that most items are supplied with a warranty, it makes an attractive proposition.

Secondly, this trend is being driven by legislation. For instance, EU regulations dictate that only 15% of a car can end up in a scrapyard. That percentage will drop to 5% in 2015, a requirement that should boost the industry’s growth, since remanufacturers need a steady supply of broken-down goods for the process to work efficiently.

Finally, there are the environmental issues. Materials represent 70% of costs for a new product, but only 40% for a remanufactured one. And because there's less casting and smelting, a particularly power-hungry aspect of production processes, energy costs are up to 85% lower than in manufacturing new products.

The growth of remanufacturing is forcing OEMs to rethink their entire business models. Until recently, many products such as cars, photocopiers, white goods and other electronic items were designed with built-in obsolescence. So consumers could be persuaded to buy new models every 2 or 3 years. The shocking decline in the auto industry means that manufacturers will not be able to constantly develop new models because there will not be markets for them. Instead they will have to be designed with future remanufacturing potential in mind. In the long term, this will benefit both manufacturers and consumers.

What does this mean for our industry? I believe that there is already increased demand for efficient, environmentally-sound surface technology equipment. The plethora of new cleaning and degreasing equipment suppliers is evidence of this. This trend also extends to powder coating, specialist coatings, shot blasting, polishing, heat treatment and many other surface finishing processes.

Machine tool suppliers are also acutely aware of this trend. Remanufacturers require machines for grinding, milling, lapping, honing and many other metal cutting and forming processes. The fact that the machine tools themselves are being remanufactured produces a product cycle that feeds upon itself. We are remanufacturing the machines in order to remanufacture more machines, and so on!

At Riley Surface World we are seeing a deluge of enquiries from remanufacturers of all types and sizes. From one man doing up alloy wheels in his garage at home to large aerospace companies applying new specialist coatings to old parts, the scope is enormous. Those of us that depend on surface finishing for our livelihoods ignore the potential of remanufacturing at our peril.