Why Backup Power Is Critical for Robotics in Smart Manufacturing - TALS

Why Backup Power Is Critical for Robotics in Smart Manufacturing
As robotics systems become central to manufacturing, the reliability of power supply is critical. MES and smart manufacturing platforms can help manage power contingencies and minimize downtime.
In today's manufacturing landscape, robotics systems operate around the clock to maximize efficiency, but power fluctuations and outages pose a persistent threat to production continuity. Reliable backup power is no longer an optional add-on but a critical infrastructure component that safeguards data integrity, prevents costly downtime, and ensures the return on investment in automation.
Industry Pain Points and Opportunities
As robotics systems evolve from standalone units to collaborative clusters, their sensitivity to power quality has escalated dramatically. Industry benchmarks indicate that nearly 30% of unplanned downtime in manufacturing is attributed to power-related issues, with each incident costing tens of thousands to millions of dollars. Traditional UPS systems can only cover short interruptions but cannot compensate for microsecond voltage sags—the primary cause of malfunction in modern servo drives and precision sensors.
Simultaneously, the push for production transparency has given rise to intelligent power management solutions. By integrating UPS units with MES platforms, facility managers gain real-time visibility into the power health of each robotic node and can predict battery degradation cycles through historical data. This digital power monitoring is transitioning from a value-add feature to a standard requirement in greenfield smart factories.
Data Integrity and Production Continuity
Robotic processes such as vision inspection and force-controlled assembly demand real-time data with minimal latency. An unexpected power failure not only halts production but can also corrupt in-process cache data, breaking the traceability chain. In automotive body shops, a 0.5-second power disruption can shift vehicle positioning parameters, requiring manual re-inspection of subsequent steps.
By deploying a dual-bus power architecture coupled with MES's breakpoint resume functionality, factories can automatically preserve the machine state before a power loss and resume production without human intervention after restoration. A global Tier 1 supplier reported a 40% reduction in power-related scrap rates after implementing such a system, recovering approximately 2,000 hours in lost capacity annually.
Deep Integration of MES and Power Monitoring
As the operational nerve center of manufacturing, MES is naturally positioned to aggregate device-level data. Through OPC UA interfaces connecting smart UPS units and power distribution cabinets, MES can capture real-time parameters such as voltage, frequency, and load rate, triggering graded alerts when anomalies occur. More advanced applications involve integration with production scheduling: when battery backup endurance is low, the system proactively de-prioritizes non-critical tasks to ensure core processes stay powered.
Following the ISA-95 standard, power monitoring has ascended from Level 1 devices to Level 3 manufacturing operations management. The TALS MES platform offers out-of-the-box power KPI dashboards and compatibility with leading UPS brands, helping facilities improve OEE by an average of 5–8 percentage points.
Key Statistics
- 30% of unplanned downtime is linked to power issues (industry benchmark)
- Smart power monitoring integrated with MES reduces power-related scrap by 40%
- Each hour of downtime costs a mid-sized plant $50,000 (industry estimate)
- Modern robotics requires power interruptions below 10 ms (industrial standard)
Outlook
Power reliability has become a defining metric of smart factory maturity. Only by incorporating backup power into unified MES governance can manufacturers achieve 'production without interruption' resilience in the face of grid instability. TALS is committed to helping manufacturers build end-to-end power assurance from the grid to robotic endpoints through its open MES platform, securing stable production dividends in an era of volatile energy.