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ABB Completes Acquisition of Siemens’ Wiring Accessories Business in China

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ABB announced it has completed the acquisition of Siemens’ Wiring Accessories business in China, to broaden ABB’s market reach and complement its regional customer offering within smart buildings. Generating over $150 million in revenue in 2024, the business adds a comprehensive product portfolio, a robust distribution network across 230 cities, and 350 skilled employees. The transaction was announced on May 17, 2024, and financial terms of the transaction were not disclosed.

The business will be margin accretive to ABB and expands ABB’s portfolio with wiring accessories, smart home systems, smart door locks and further peripheral home automation products, which will continue with the Siemens brand under terms of a licensing agreement. With a strengthened product range and distribution network, ABB is well positioned to deliver integrated, innovative solutions that modernise buildings, improve energy efficiency, and tackle the global challenge of reducing carbon emissions.

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Mike Mustapha, President of ABB Electrification’s Smart Building Division said: “This acquisition strengthens ABB’s position and commitment to growth in China’s wiring accessories market, complementing our smart buildings technologies portfolio and enabling us to meet evolving customer needs by creating safer, smarter and more sustainable buildings. We are perfectly positioned to offer a full range of wiring accessories, home and building automation, energy distribution and management solutions, to address major local challenges such as rapid urbanisation, energy transition, electrification of buildings, decarbonisation and advancing AI and digitalisation.”

Siemens Launches First Fully Integrated Digitalisation Hub in Singapore

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Image courtesy of RENDY ARYANTO / Visual Verve Studios

Siemens launched its first fully integrated Digitalization Hub in July 2017 to bring its expertise and innovations in the Internet of Things (IoT) to the Southeast Asian market. Siemens will be co-creating future digital applications with customers and partners to build a digital ecosystem.

The launch took place simultaneously at parallel events in Singapore and at Siemens’ headquarters in Munich: Singapore’s Prime Minister, Lee Hsien Loong, and the President and CEO of Siemens AG, Joe Kaeser, unveiled a plaque in Munich to mark the Hub’s opening, while Singapore’s Minister for Trade and Industry (Industry), S. Iswaran, and the CEO of Siemens Singapore, Armin Bruck, opened the Hub in Singapore.

Supported by the Singapore Economic Development Board (EDB), the Hub brings together data scientists, solution architects, software engineers, system experts and domain specialists from the urban infrastructure, industrial and healthcare sectors. These professionals will experiment, learn, develop and test-bed innovations and future-ready digital solutions that help businesses become more efficient and sustainable.

An integral part of the Digitalization Hub concept is MindSphere, an open, cloud- based IoT operating system that offers data analytics, connectivity capabilities and tools for developers, applications and services. This platform helps evaluate and process data to gain insights and optimise asset performance for maximised productivity.

“Innovations have been a vital part of Siemens’ DNA for 170 years. With this Digitalization Hub, we’re creating synergy and an ecosystem for our teams, customers and business partners to tap into the benefits that digitalisation can bring,” said Joe Kaeser, President and CEO of Siemens AG. “Singapore is the ideal location for this Hub because of its distinctively advanced industrial and urban infrastructure development, combined with the government’s Smart Nation thrust to enable a digital economy.”

Sixty specialists from a variety of disciplines will work at the Hub at the outset. The number of digitalisation experts is expected to reach 300 by the year 2022. The key target areas for the Hub are urban infrastructure, advanced manufacturing and healthcare.

To mark the launch of the Siemens Digitalization Hub, three collaboration agreements were signed with Singapore partners. Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) will partner with Siemens to create and showcase data-driven innovations for urban infrastructure, such as innovative mobility solutions based on self-driving vehicles, and advanced data analytics for optimising the performance of green buildings.

SP Group will collaborate with Siemens to build a next-generation energy management software platform for SP’s 24/7 control centres, to enable more robust planning, surveillance and predictive maintenance of Singapore’s electricity network. They will also create a multi-energy urban micro grid solution to help consumers save energy and cost.

The electronics arm of Singapore Technologies Engineering Ltd, a leading technology, engineering and defence group; Singapore Technologies Electronics Limited (ST Electronics), and Siemens signed a partnership agreement to co-create and proactively market innovative digital use cases in the field of transportation (roads, harbours, airports and mass transit). The focus is on applications and solutions for connectivity, cyber security, data convergence, analytics and contextualisation. These applications will use MindSphere to enable expansion into further market segments.

New software platform offers comprehensive energy management for buildings and building portfolios

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The Siemens Building Technologies Division launches Advantage Navigator, a software platform which can track the long-term performance of a single building, entire physical campus, or virtual network of hundreds or even thousands of sites.
The cloud-based software platform enables the user to monitor and analyze total building performance as measured through energy consumption, energy procurement and key sustainability performance indicators.
“The Advantage Navigator platform evolved from Siemens’ Energy Management and Controlling (EMC) solution, which collects, connects, and analyzes data,” explains Eike Steffen, global head of Building Performance and Sustainability at Siemens Building Technologies Division. “Whereas the EMC solution focused primarily on the demand side and consumption information, the Advantage Navigator platform incorporates energy supply management functionalities to provide a complete picture of total energy management.”
Unlike other providers of building enterprise platforms, Siemens has a full contingent of analysts and energy experts who can identify and implement recommendations to help customers drive maximum energy efficiency, minimize operating costs, and reduce environmental impact.

“What differentiates us from the rest of the industry is our seamless integration of domain expertise and technology to help our clients achieve optimal energy and operational performance,” explains Peter Halliday, Head of Building Performance and Sustainability for the Middle-East and Asia-Pacific Region. “In addition to energy management applications, the Advantage Navigator platform has robust operational performance analytics to drive system efficiency measures.”
Customizable, scalable and user friendly, the Advantage Navigator platform serves as a customer portal for such areas as supply management, system performance, and compliance reporting. The technology can provide a holistic and enterprise-wide view of energy and operational performance, resulting in better energy reporting, improved energy monitoring, accurate utility bill management and carbon reporting.
In its latest building energy management software benchmarking report, Verdantix, an independent market research firm, ranked Siemens’ Advantage Navigator platform as a leader among an increasingly competitive market segment.
“Siemens’ Advantage Navigator platform is one of the most comprehensive energy and operational performance platforms that encompasses both energy supply and demand analysis,” says Matt Heffley, Verdantix analyst and benchmarking report co-author. “Siemens’ approach to go beyond energy management and into key building analytics resonates with the market needs of today.”

No Cause For Panic

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Again and again, disasters strike and cause widespread panic -whether it’s fireworks lobbed into crowds during a sports event or a fire at an airport, nightclub or hotel. With a view to understanding crowd dynamics, researchers are examining whether people react to events in specific patterns and whether threats can be recognized and perhaps headed off. One such researcher is Dr. Wolfram Klein, a mathematician who works at Siemens Corporate Technology (CT) in Munich.

Together with his team, Klein has developed a model that simulates crowd behavior, thus helping researchers to predict where and when a critical situation may arise. Klein’s model can simulate the way in which crowds of tens of thousands of people behave. What’s interesting, according to Klein, is that “they move very similarly to liquids or gases.” Like molecules, people either attract or repel each other.

In addition, when people move through buildings they have to navigate around walls and other obstacles; and, of course, small, narrow spaces can lead to congestion. “Based on the principles of alternately attracting and repelling forces, we can chart human behavior and produce predictions in terms of mathematical equations,” says Klein.

The software could help architects plan safer buildings because it can identify which spots might give rise to dangerous situations. Klein is certain that comparatively simple procedures and planning steps could prevent many disasters.

In order to illustrate human behavioral patterns even more realistically, his team has continuously refined its simulation model. For instance, the software now not only uses statistical methods to depict the effects of a person’s age and health on their walking behavior, but also takes group interaction into consideration as a factor. In addition, the Munich-based researchers have improved their mathematical calculations significantly.

According to Klein, the system is now so fast that their crowd simulations can be used to make short-term predictions. “We can tell up to five minutes beforehand what is likely to happen assuming that no one intervenes. This way, the head of operations at a facility could act quickly.

This method of crowd control has already been tested in various research projects, including one carried out at Frankfurt’s central train station. Based on surveillance camera footage, the software was able to accurately predict the flow of pedestrian traffic — as well as congestion — several minutes before it occurred. The program has also been successfully used in and around the soccer stadium in Kaiserslautern.

Evacuating the city’s stadium would be a dramatic challenge for the police and fire department. Although the stadium accommodates up to 40,000 people when it is full, it offers only a few escape routes. And to make matters more difficult, all of them lead through the surrounding residential areas.

 Safe, Quick Evacuations

In the future, the researchers also want to use this knowledge to support their colleagues in Siemens’ Building Technologies Division. To this end, in the Swiss town of Zug experts are developing dynamic fire protection solutions for buildings — so-called intelligent response systems. Christian Frey, who is responsible for innovations in Zug, explains: “These are highly professional systems that can react immediately and effectively to dangerous situations or incidents.”

Frey points out that in order to get people out of a burning building safely and quickly, the usual green signs along hallways indicating escape routes are not sufficient. In public buildings such as hospitals and hotels, he says, most people aren’t familiar with their surroundings. “If you’re in a panic, the next emergency exit isn’t that easy to find.”

Studies also show that many people fail to react appropriately to conventional warning signals such as honking or sirens. They often think it’s just a fire drill or a false alarm — or else they don’t know what to do. This is where information technology can help. For instance, office workers could receive automatic warnings and updates on their personal computer screens. At the same time, large electronic screens in the hallways and smartphones would display arrows showing people how to get out of a building. In addition, sensors in ceilings and floors would be able to measure the stream of people.

Based on this information, an intelligent building software system would be able to recognize early on when a particular escape route is in danger of becoming overcrowded. It would then respond by directing people to the fastest and best alternative route out of a building and into the open. Visual systems would also be complemented by voice alarms and mass text messages.

Fire Department App

What’s more, such systems will be able to improve building management and support rescue workers. “The system analyzes data from a building, recommends immediate measures to defuse the situation, generates dynamic, up-to-date instructions, and helps rescue workers manage the evacuation and direct people to escape routes,” says Frey, describing the idea behind the software concept. In the future, he adds, when a fire breaks out, the building management system will immediately link up with the fire department’s computer system. Rescue teams and fire fighters would then receive a blueprint of the building on their smartphones. Such a plan would not only display the source of the fire, but also monitor how it is spreading. In addition, intelligent movement sensors would indicate where people are located in the building.

Together with other companies and institutes, Siemens researchers are developing these technologies as a part of the EU DESSiRE (Designing Safe, Secure and Resilient Large Building Complexes) project. Siemens’ simulation experts from Munich are also assuming an additional role. Specifically, they have developed a method that allows them to predict the spread of fire in different kinds of buildings. Klein explains how it works: “We can light a virtual fire in order to see how it will affect each building.” The researchers can simulate fire in various surroundings and different interior fittings — for example, with or without furniture, or with flammable or flame-resistant materials. By trying out these different scenarios, the heads of operations can learn to predict the spread of a fire more accurately and to thus act promptly and effectively according to a given situation.