SUSSEX manufacturers will need to focus on upskilling and digitisation to reap the benefits of Industry 4.0 – the so-called fourth industrial revolution.

The latest meeting of METALL - the Manufacturing, Engineering and Technology Alliance - has taken place.

It’s a forum for south coast and Gatwick diamond businesses in the sector.

The meeting heard that while robotics, 3D printing and artificial intelligence offered potential for productivity gains, there were structural barriers to overcome.

Speaking at the event was Philippa Oldham, head of manufacturing and transport for the Institution of Mechanical Engineers.

She said nine in ten manufacturers were aware of developments in robotics but that industry’s skills gap remained a significant challenge.

She said: “We need to get more people excited about engineering from apprentices through to Phd graduates so that we are equipped as a sector to optimise the value of the fourth industrial revolution.”

She estimated that manufacturing needed to find 182,000 new technicians and engineers every year until 2022 to meet demand.

This skills gap was underlined in the latest MHA Carpenter Box manufacturing and engineering report.

This showed that 84 per cent of manufacturing businesses in the south east were struggling to recruit people.

Despite these challenges, the survey found that the majority of local businesses remained optimistic about the future which perhaps reflects the fact that engineers, by definition, solve problems.

METALL is supported by MHA Carpenter Box chartered accountants, asb law and sector recruitment professionals, CBSbutler.