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| You are here > Articles > Reliability and Maintenance Management Current Best Practices part 1 |
Reliability and Maintenance Management Current Best Practices part 1 |
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You have been told you that your maintenance cost as a percent of estimated replacement value (ERV) is 4.6% and that this is too high. Best performers, you are told, should have maintenance cost lower than 3% of ERV. (Our database shows that the average maintenance cost as percent of ERV in the process industry is 4.2%.) So, now what do you do about this? COMPARING MAINTENANCE COSTS.Before we discuss what you can do, I would like to discuss the reliability
of maintenance cost comparisons between plants. During the last year,
I have worked with two companies that were competing in the same market
segment with the same products. For years, cost comparisons, including
maintenance costs, had been made between the two companies' plants. One
company's plants always had the lowest maintenance cost per ton. Then,
these companies merged and "overnight" the maintenance cost
for the company with the lowest maintenance cost per product produced
went up 50%! ESTABLISHING A RELIABLE ERV. A reliable ERV is equally difficult to establish. To make an attempt
for getting it as close to right as possible, you need to go back to the
original investment of the mill. Then, you have to decide what index to
use for estimating current replacement value. After that, you need to
cluster all investments and divestments, for example, in a three-year
time period. When all this is done, you can calculate ERV. DEFINING CURRENT BEST PRACTICES.You can name maintenance any three-letter acronym you want, but if you
break the maintenance function down to its elements or practices, you
will soon notice that they will all have to be done in an efficient manner
to deliver better performance. So, what are these practices? Many years
ago we defined all these practices and have used them to evaluate and
identify maintenance improvement opportunities in hundreds of maintenance
organizations all over the world. Recently, we sat down again with corporate
management of a major international company to define all these practices.
To no one's surprise, these practices were the same as 30 years ago. It
must be explained that these practices only describe WHAT the best practices
are, the execution—or HOW—can vary between plants and also
within plants. |
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