4.2 Article

The economic potential of semi-automated tele-extraction of roundwood in Sweden

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF FOREST ENGINEERING
Volume 33, Issue 3, Pages 271-288

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/14942119.2022.2103784

Keywords

Forwarding; CTL; teleoperation; automation; discrete event simulation; organization

Categories

Funding

  1. Automation for Autonomous Terrain Mobility (AUTO2), a project within the VINNOVA (the Swedish Governmental Agency for Innovation Systems) programme Challenge Driven Innovation
  2. Swedish Foundation for Strategic Environmental Research (MISTRA)

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The mechanization of roundwood harvesting in Sweden drastically reduced costs historically, but the next major wave of development is expected to focus on automation and teleoperation. A study evaluating the economic potential of semi-automated tele-extraction revealed that utilizing teleoperation for longer extraction distances could lead to significant cost reductions.
The mechanization of roundwood harvesting in Sweden has historically cut costs rapidly. However, machinery and work methods have conceptually stayed the same since the introduction of the single-grip harvester. Current trends indicate that the next major wave of development will be based on automation, and that teleoperation is a step in this direction. This study aims to evaluate the economic potential of semi-automated tele-extraction compared to standard forwarding within the Nordic CTL two-machine harvesting system. The initial scenario examined autonomous terrain transportation with teleoperation during loading and unloading. A Discrete Event Simulation was implemented in the AnyLogic software. Input data included 1100 Swedish harvest sites, with in total 1.6 million m(3) and extraction distances from 20 to 1500 m. Scenarios with different numbers of teleoperators for a fleet of ten forwarders were tested. The optimum number of operators was seven per ten forwarders, resulting in a potential extraction cost reduction of 7% compared to standard forwarding. Extraction distances further than 500 m enabled use of five or six teleoperators, resulting in potential cost reductions of up to 15%. The highest potential cost reductions were linked to increased time used for autonomous driving, increasing the teleoperator availability for other machines. The simulation model provides a framework for further evaluation of new scenarios of automation and teleoperation of forwarders.

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