Governance, Standards and Regulation: What Construction and Mining Need to Commit to Industry 4.0
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Since the pandemic, to what extent does Industry 4.0 remain the benchmark for Digital Transformtion?
- What are the strengths and weaknesses of Industry 4.0 as platform for Digital Tranformation?
- How has Industry 4.0 research benefitted construction and mining?
2. Literature Review
2.1. Digital Transformation: Construction in Australia
- Wearables with embedded sensors to monitor for hazardous conditions or exposure to noxious chemicals;
- e-Textiles which provide data on worker’s physiological condition including pulse, respiration, and body temperature;
- Exoskeletons which limit muscular strain and enhance strength;
- Smart PPE which monitor eye movements for signs of fatigue (or drug abuse).
- Biomedical Pads capable of detecting brain activity to monitor cognitive engagement;
- Embedded electronic devices within the bodies of workers themselves linking them to sensors throughout the site.
2.2. Digital Transformation: Mining in Australia
- Risk and social impact
- Work and welfare
- Work and education
- Land and the indigenous estate
- Human rights and development
2.3. Digital Transformation: Industry 4.0 in Australia
- Strategy and leadership: adoption must be driven by a commitment to achieving clear aims and objectives by company executive.
- Organisational culture: the company structure must be horizontal and oriented towards continuous innovation.
- Governance, safety and security: a rules-based environment which promotes safety and data security is essential.
- Workforce: roles must be redefined to eliminate repetitive tasks, promote autonomy and continuous learning.
- Smart products and services: value-adding technology must be embedded in the products and services of the company.
3. Methodology
Systematic Searches
4. Findings
4.1. Bibliometric Analysis: Leading Industry 4.0 Scholars
4.2. Bibliometric Analysis: Word Dynamics and Topic Clusters
4.3. Critical Content Reiview: Digital Transformation in Construction and Mining
- Connectivity
- Data
- Decision making
4.4. Critical Content Review: Industry 4.0—Organizational Structure and Strategice Objectives
- Reference architectures, standards and norms
- Technology and application scenarios
- Security of networked systems
- Legal frameworks
- Work, education
- Digital business models in Industry 4.0
- Value creation scenarios
- Technological trends
- New methods and tools
- Work and society
- Autonomy, which requires universal access to digital infrastructure, where users can safely and securely conduct business, research, and development;
- Interoperability, which concerns creating a standardized, rules-based environment to ensure the beneficial use of artificial intelligence and big data; and
- Sustainability, which means fostering ongoing employment in high-quality jobs, high levels of participation by German workers and embracing the technological challenges presented by climate change.
4.5. Critical Content Review: Industry 4.0—Scholarly Output
TITLE((Industry 4.0) and Standard* or Regulation*) AND (LIMIT-TO (EXACTKEYWORD,”Interoperability”) OR LIMIT-TO (EXACTKEYWORD,”Standardization”) OR LIMIT-TO (EXACTKEYWORD,”Standards”)) AND (LIMIT-TO (LANGUAGE,”English”)) AND (LIMIT-TO (SRCTYPE,”j”))
4.6. Critical Content Review: Industry 4.0—Implimentation and Lessons Learned
- It sidelines the complex formal relationships, policies, networks, public funding, and support structures which have been built over time around the German vision;
- It says nothing of the difficulty of transitioning existing workforces and small to medium enterprises (“SMEs”) without considerable government support; and
- It says even less about adapting heavy industries like construction and mining.
- The smart factory;
- Cyber-physical systems; and
- Self-organizing, decentralized manufacturing systems.
- High-grade digitization of processes;
- Smart manufacturing;
- Inter-company connectivity.
4.7. Critical Content Review: Industry 4.0, Construction and Mining
- Building Information Modelling
- Internet of Things (IoT)/Internet of Service (IoS)
- Product Lifecycle Management (PLM)
- Cloud Computing
- Mobile Computing
- Striking a balance between the profit motive and social equity;
- Re-skilling existing workforces to mitigate digital joblessness;
- Empowering workers by incorporating their aspirations;
- Creating flat organizations which extend to surrounding communities;
- Commitment to cooperating with trade unions;
- Implementing change responsibility.
- Building Information Modelling (BIM)
- Radio Frequency Identification Devices (RFID)
- Global Positioning Systems (GPS)
- The Internet of Things (IoT)
- Geographic Information Systems
- Sensors
- Augmented Reality (AR)
- Virtual Reality (VR)
- Photogrammetry
- Laser scanning
- Artificial Intelligence (AI)
- 3D printing
- Robotics
- Bigdata
- Blockchain.
5. Discussion
5.1. Synthesis
- Since the pandemic, to what extent does Industry 4.0 remain the benchmark for Digital Transformation?
- What are the institutional strengths and weaknesses of Industry 4.0 as a platform for Digital Transformation?
- How has Industry 4.0 research benefitted construction and mining?
5.2. Recommendations
5.3. Limitations of This Research
5.4. Implecations
6. Conclusions
- Since the pandemic, to what extent does Industry 4.0 remain the benchmark for Digital Transformtion?
- What are the institutional strengths and weaknesses of Industry 4.0 as a platform for Digital Transformation?
- How has Industry 4.0 research benefitted construction and mining?
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Industry 4.0 | Digital | Transformation | Construction | Mining |
---|---|---|---|---|
Industrie 4.0 | Technology | Readiness | Building | Primary |
Fourth Industrial Revolution | Innovation | Maturity | Industry | Resources |
4th Industrial Revolution | Implementation | Industry | Extraction | |
Industrial Internet of Things | Diffusion | Sector | Energy | |
IIOT | Adoption | Industry | ||
Sector |
Action | Query |
---|---|
Search 1 | (Industry 4.0) OR (Industrie 4.0) OR (Fourth Industrial Revolution) OR (4th Industrial Revolution) OR (Industrial Internet of Things) OR (IIOT) AND Digital OR Technology OR Innovation AND Transformation OR Readiness OR Maturity OR Implementation OR Diffusion OR Adoption OR Acceptance |
Search 2 | (Industry 4.0) OR (Industrie 4.0) OR (Fourth Industrial Revolution) OR (4th Industrial Revolution) OR (Industrial Internet of Things) OR (IIOT) AND Digital OR Technology OR Innovation AND Transformation OR Readiness OR Maturity OR Implementation OR Diffusion OR Adoption OR Acceptance AND (Construction Industry) OR (Construction Sector) (Building Industry) OR (Building Sector) |
Search 3 | (Industry 4.0) OR (Industrie 4.0) OR (Fourth Industrial Revolution) OR (4th Industrial Revolution) OR (Industrial Internet of Things) OR (IIOT) AND Digital OR Technology OR Innovation AND Transformation OR Readiness OR Maturity OR Implementation OR Diffusion OR Adoption OR Acceptance AND (Mining Industry) OR (Mining Sector) OR (Extraction Industry) OR (Extraction Sector) OR (Primary Industr*) OR (Primary Sector) OR (Resource* Industry) OR (Resource* Sector) OR (Energy Industry) OR (Energy Sector) |
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Smith, K.; Sepasgozar, S. Governance, Standards and Regulation: What Construction and Mining Need to Commit to Industry 4.0. Buildings 2022, 12, 1064. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12071064
Smith K, Sepasgozar S. Governance, Standards and Regulation: What Construction and Mining Need to Commit to Industry 4.0. Buildings. 2022; 12(7):1064. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12071064
Chicago/Turabian StyleSmith, Kai, and Samad Sepasgozar. 2022. "Governance, Standards and Regulation: What Construction and Mining Need to Commit to Industry 4.0" Buildings 12, no. 7: 1064. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12071064
APA StyleSmith, K., & Sepasgozar, S. (2022). Governance, Standards and Regulation: What Construction and Mining Need to Commit to Industry 4.0. Buildings, 12(7), 1064. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12071064