Canadian Manufacturing

NGen funds deployment of automation solutions through MDA

by CM Staff   

Manufacturing Operations Research & Development Technology / IIoT Aerospace Public Sector advanced manufacturing artificial intelligence In Focus Industry 4.0 Manufacturing Robotics


Each project partner will develop transferable technologies that can assist other Canadian manufacturers achieve long term success.

HAMILTON — Next Generation Manufacturing Canada (NGen), Canada’s Advanced Manufacturing Supercluster, has co-funded a private sector consortium led by MDA that will enable the integration of artificial intelligence, industry 4.0, data sharing, and collaborative robotics into highly flexible, adaptable manufacturing environments.

MDA along with partners Promark Electronics (Montreal, QC) and AV&R (Saint-Bruno, QC) seek to transform the Canadian manufacturing landscape by applying advanced manufacturing technologies into production environments where constant changes and the ability to maintain flexibility are essential competitive advantages.

The Supercluster project demonstrates a collaboration between Canadian companies of varying size and capability and will improve the capacity of Canada’s manufacturers and technology companies to manage technology development, adoption and scale-up for manufacturing in Canada.

Each project partner will develop transferable technologies that can assist other Canadian manufacturers achieve long term success. Aimed at New Space manufacturing challenges, MDA will develop industry 4.0 solutions in automated assembly and testing for high-volume satellite constellations. Promark Electronics will develop new solutions in flexible robotic systems for small parts electronics assembly, and use artificial intelligence for production planning and business insights. AV&R will develop new solutions to apply AI in manufacturing for robot & cobot task management and optimization, data management and analysis inside automated systems, 3D metrology capabilities and reconfigurable robotic systems.

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These projects are part of the increasing portfolio of NGen-funded advanced manufacturing initiatives under the Canadian Government’s Innovation Supercluster Initiative. Rather than small, incremental improvements to stretch existing manufacturing systems, NGen support and funding should allow project teams to reach beyond and rebuild operations that ensure long-term competitiveness.

“Canada’s manufacturing sector is becoming increasingly flexible and technologically advanced, thanks to initiatives such as the Innovation Superclusters,” said the Honourable François-Philippe Champagne, Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry.

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