Robotic case packing for a safer end-of-line environment

Indonesian dairy relieves its congested manual case-packing area by installing 11 robotic case packers that improve efficiency, create a safer work environment, and reduce labor costs.

Shown are Fresian Flag employees instrumental in the installation of the company’s new robotic case packers.
Shown are Fresian Flag employees instrumental in the installation of the company’s new robotic case packers.

Frisian Flag Indonesia, part of Dutch international dairy group Friesland Campina, has become a convert to robotics, after adding end-of-line automation to 16 packaging lines at its Pasar Rebo, Indonesia, manufacturing facility. As part of Friesland Campina, Frisian Flag is required to meet the same international safety and quality standards as its parent company. This applies both to consumer product safety as well as to employee safety. Production processes are run on the principles of four zeros: zero accidents, zero incidents, zero waste, and zero losses. This makes productivity, efficiency, and safety important drivers when investing in new equipment.

Until the addition of 11 robotic case packers from Gebo Cermex to its Pasar Rebo plant—one of two in Jakarta—Frisian Flag’s case-packing area for sachets of sweetened, condensed milk was severely congested: More than 100 people worked in the area 24/7 to manually case-pack sachets coming from 16 filling lines.

Explains Johannes Althuisius, Project Manager at Frisian Flag, “In the past, we had a process where the sachets would come out of a filler, operators would fold them over manually and put them on the infeed to a flow wrapper, and from the flow wrapper, operators would pack the sachets into a case, and then put the case onto a conveyor that would bring it to the palletizing area. The packing department was very, very crowded, and at the same time, there were forklifts moving through the area. It led to a lot of unsafe situations. And it was also quite hard to manage that many people.”

Not only were there safety considerations, but labor costs were also a concern. Each year in Indonesia, minimum wages rise by 10% to 15%. “We realized we needed to mechanize and automate our packing solution,” says Althuisius. “Case packing seemed like the low-hanging fruit.”

In selecting a system, Frisian Flag received bids from three suppliers. According to Althuisius, the first company offered a good machine, but the equipment was not flexible, which would make it difficult to incorporate into Frisian Flag’s layout. The second, also a good machine, did offer flexibility, but there was no local support. “Gebo Cermex offered us both,” he says. “They offered us a machine that was very flexible and could fit into our squeezed department, and on top of that, they had a local support team.”

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