Concrete
New Concepts in Material Handling
Published
10 years agoon
By
admin
The cement industry can adopt newer material handling concepts with the help of a few innovations. Jai Gupta explores the new material handling ideas available and how these can be implemented.
The Indian cement industry has witnessed rapid growth in the past two decades. The overall production capacity of several sectors has doubled or even quadrupled over this period. Such rapid growth has posed several challenges for the industry, some of which are:
- The conventional?easy to access? locations are no more available. New projects are forced to go for difficult-to-access locations from where material movements are difficult.
- Land is gradually becoming a scarce resource. The industry is facing difficulties in land availability/ acquisition, and is hence being forced to go away from the markets or is being forced to manage in a limited area.
- Unit sizes are becoming larger to harness economies of scale. Such enlargement in size is forcing the industry to market its products in larger areas.
- With specific reference to the cement industry, growing demands and need of fly ash-based PPC production has forced many industry players to set up grinding units close to thermal power plants for fly ash consumption. As these thermal power plants are generally located closer to densely populated areas, space is always a constraint and hence they cannot develop good infrastructure for rail/road movement of material.
All the issues enumerated above are putting more and more pressure on the logistics of material movement. As material transportation is a sizeable portion of the total cost of production, any gains or reduction in cost of material movement could help the industry greatly.
Due to the needs of high capacity material movement at fast pace and inadequacy of road networks in remote areas, the industry?s reliance on rail transportation has substantially increased. Some good ideas have been implemented, relating to material movement through rail routes. These concepts have been successfully employed by Holtec in cement as well as other industries, and could help the industry in optimising expenses on material handling.
New Concepts in Material Handling
i.In-motion loading of material in railway rakes
ii.Movable wagon loader feeding stationary rakes
iii.Use of bottom discharge wagons for transport and its easy and fast unloading iv.Use of wagon shifters to substantially reduce the area required for the installation of a wagon tippler.
In-Motion Loading of Material in Railway Rakes
For majority of the industries requiring bulk material transportation, loading is usually done through either multiple overland hoppers constructed on top of the railway tracks, or manually through pay loaders. The usual time taken for one complete rake varies from three-six hours depending upon the arrangement or equipment employed. More number of hoppers or pay loaders can reduce the time taken; however, they add to certain other issues, such as:
- Heavy to very heavy civil construction
- More number of operators
- Dust nuisance, spillages, material wastage and degradation etc.
- With a rapid loading system, the entire rake can be loaded in about 60-80 minutes, from a single discharge point.
What is Rapid Loading?
In rapid loading of material, material is loaded on a rake, while the railway rake is in motion. One silo (of about one full rake capacity) is constructed on top of the rail track. Below the hopper, another small hopper is provided on load cells, which can accommodate about one wagonload of material. The above two hoppers are connected through hydraulic gates and a large chute, so that within seconds, material gets transferred from the main hopper to the pre-weigh hopper (mounted on the load cell).
Before a rake arrives, the silo is filled, so that fast material loading on the rake does not get disturbed. In the beginning, the load cell hopper is filled with pre-weighed material. As soon as the wagon comes in position, the loading starts and by the time it crosses, the complete wagon is loaded. During the period of wagon change, the pre-weigh hopper again receives the material from the main hopper, so that by the time another wagon comes into position, it is ready with the material. During this entire operation, the railway rake moves at the speed of about 0.6 to 0.7 km/hr. That means a full railway rake of about 650 m length is likely to get loaded in about one hour.
The majority of the collieries in India have been using the rapid loading system for coal rake loading.
Adopting a similar concept, Holtec designed a rapid loading system for lignite. As the system was designed for lignite, it was substantially different from the usual rapid loading system. However, it has been performing very successfully for the last 10-12 years. At this location, a rake of about 40 wagons is being loaded in about 45 minutes. Although the system is located close to a densely populated area, owners do not face any difficulties in operation as the process generates negligible dust. The material filling and closing is done through hydraulic gates, and wagon positioning is sensed through the proximity switches. A little bit of maintenance and care in operation is enough to keep the system spillage free.
At this location, there were several constraints such as poor soil bearing capacity, low water table, limited execution period, etc. Hence, while designing the system, three small silos were constructed to store one rake load of material, rather than a single hopper. A single hydraulic system was considered with three chutes below each of the silos, without affecting the investment cost. Underground construction was reduced to a minimum, and as lignite is light, no pre-weigh hopper was installed. The arrangement as installed for lignite loading has been depicted in Fig.-1.Benefits
The conventional system of rail loading requires three to six hours for loading of one complete rail rake, whereas with rapid loading system, the entire loading operation for one rake could be completed in about one hour. Assuming average savings of three hours per rake, we may save about 2,000 rake-hours annually, for a handling of about 2 million tonnes per annum (MTPA) capacity. Such faster movements help in better utilisation of rakes, especially if the company owns the rakes.
- The total investment required for rapid loading is substantially lower as compared to conventional systems.
- Reduced number of operators and attendants.
- Dust nuisance, material wastage and degradation are substantially reduced.
Prerequisites
For the hauling of railway rake at a constant speed of 0.6 to 0.7 km/hr, creep drives need to be installed on the locomotive. As the normal locomotives from railways do not have this facility, the plant will have to maintain its own locomotive for haulage of the railway rake.Movable Wagon Loader to Load Stationary Rake
The proposal of rapid loading of railway rake is a good option, but it essentially needs full rake space on either side of the loading point. Secondly, it also needs a dedicated loco which can pull the complete rake at a fixed speed.
Recently for a project, the available land was insufficient to go ahead with a rapid loading system. Also, the client was not inclined to go for the purchase of loco. Hence, we looked for alternate options and came out with a solution of movable wagon loader which can load the rake while on the move.
The wagon loader is generally placed in the centre and on its either side, rail tracks are constructed so that two full rakes can be placed on either side. The wagon loader is fed by a stacking conveyor and has a reversible boom conveyor for feeding the wagons on both the tracks as per requirements.
The wagon loader capacity can be in the range of 1,500-2,000 tph without any difficulty. The wagon loader is provided with a diversion chute at the outlet, which is designed in such a way that it diverts the material into the next wagon, at the junction point. After certain travel, it returns back to the earlier discharge point.
As the performance of the equipment largely depends upon consistent feeding of material, we need to either have a dedicated storage with some positive discharge equipment, or connection is made with consistent feed from the existing storage itself.
The speed of the wagon loader is controlled with the material on the conveyor. With capacity variations in feed, loader speed is adjusted automatically. As the material feed to the wagon is gradual, we get a smooth filling to the wagon. The smoother the filling, lesser is the dust nuisance. For the materials conducive to water spray, a foggy water spray ring can be provided around the discharge chute so that the nuisance dust generation can be further reduced. A few typical arrangements of wagon loaders are shown in Pic-1. Benefits
Conventional rail loading/rapid loading requires approximately 1.5 km of rail tracks for the loading of a complete rail rake in one go. With the proposed arrangement for loading of rail rake, only about 800 m of rail track length is required. In many circumstances, rail track length is a constraint and this solution can immensely help.
The loading time of a rake can be within two hours, which is better than the conventional system, and still saves about two hours of loading time per rake. Expected annual savings on rail rake hours will be about 1,400 hours, for a handling of about 2 MTPA capacity. Such faster movements help in better utilisation of rakes, especially if the company owns them.
- The total investment required is low. It does not require any on-track storages.
- Reduced number of operators and attendants.
- Dust nuisance, material wastage and degradation is substantially reduced.
Use of Bottom Discharge Wagons for Material Transport and Its Easy Unloading Traditionally, majority of the industry has been using normal BOX/BOXN type of wagons for transportation of various goods. For the unloading of these wagons, wagon tipplers are installed through which these wagons are unloaded. As the Railways allows seven hours of free time for mechanised unloading, wagon tipplers were typically designed to unload a full rake of 58 wagons in approximately four-five hours (i.e., 12-15 wagons unloading per hour).
As the Railways wishes to go for longer rakes with larger capacity wagons, in recent years RDSO has released certain new guidelines. According to these guidelines, all new installations (installed after November 2010) shall take into consideration larger wagon size and unloading speed shall be increased to about 25 wagons per hour. As per the new designs of wagon tipplers, size of wagon tippler, its civil construction requirements and capacities of the material handling equipment have substantially increased.
As such, installation of a wagon tippler and associated auxiliaries was expensive, and recent enforcement from Railways, has further escalated the cost of installations of the wagon tippler and its associated auxiliaries.
As against BOXC and BOXN type of wagon allocated to the industry, power plants are allocated bottom discharge wagons (BOBRN), which can be emptied through pneumatic gates installed below the wagons. For the discharge of such wagons, thermal power plants install long track hoppers with plough feeders. This is again quite an expensive arrangement. As against normal track hoppers, Holtec designed a simple but effective system for lignite unloading in 2002, which is running successfully since then.
BOBRN is an open hopper car with rapid (pneumatic) bottom discharge doors, air-braked. BOBRN and BOBR are most often used for carrying coal to thermal power plants, and also for ore, stone, track ballast, etc. Each wagon holds some 60 tonnes of coal loaded from top and unloaded from bottom by means of the pneumatically operated doors. The contents can be discharged completely in about 15 seconds. Based on the success of earlier design system for lignite, Holtec has designed two such systems – one for multiple materials such as coal, copper concentrates and rock phosphate, and another for coal. The system designed for coal has been operational since last year.
Handling multiple materials from a single track hopper is usually a challenge. Secondly, some of these materials are fine and difficult to flow. Care has been taken while designing the system.
The proposed wagon unloading system is quite simple, with underground hoppers and apron feeder installed for each wagon unloading track hopper. Typically, about seven to eight minutes is required to unload one set of wagons, which includes wagon placement, connection of compressed air and unloading. If the system is designed with four hoppers, approximately two hours are sufficient to empty out a complete rake of 58 wagons. With more number of unloading hoppers, better speed of emptying can be achieved. The system requires shore compressed air arrangement, which needs to be connected to the wagons, and with one stroke, the complete wagon gets emptied in a matter of seconds.
A general arrangement of track hopper has been shown in Fig.-1 and Fig.-2. If the Railways is approached to provide such wagons to other industries as well, the entire process of material unloading becomes simpler and cost effective. The system proposed is quite simple, effective, fast and economical (not only for installation but also for operation).
Expected benefits
The conventional system of unloading (wagon tippler) requires about four-five hours for unloading of one rake, whereas with the proposed arrangement, the entire unloading operation for one rake could be completed in about two hours. This three-hour saving on one rake could result into substantially large annual savings, considering material movement by bottom discharge wagons.
The total investment required for the proposed system will be lower as compared to the wagon tippler, especially of new design (G-33, Rev-01 May 2010).
Reliability of the system will be much better as compared to the wagon tippler.
Dust nuisance substantially reduces as compared to the conventional systems.
Prerequisites
Initially, it could be difficult for the industry to switch over to bottom discharge wagons, as the Railways has limited quantity of such wagons, but gradually they need to switch over. As many industry players are interested to go for their own wagons, it could be better to go for bottom discharge wagons rather than going for conventional BOXC/BOXN wagons.
Use of Wagon Shifters
As we all know, land for the industry is gradually becoming a scarce resource. It becomes difficult to buy a large piece of land just for the smooth operation of a wagon tippler. For any industrial unit intending to install a wagon tippler, a large strip of land is needed to be bought just to provide sufficient space (equivalent to one railway rake length) on either side of the wagon tippler.
In some cases, we have noticed that the entire production unit needs about 5 hectares of land, whereas about 7.5 hectares of land needs to be acquired only for the necessary rail installation for smooth functioning of the wagon tippler, that too in a very typical plot size of 50 m x 1500 m. In our recent projects, we have faced a lot of problems on this account.
To tackle this issue, the wagon traversers are proposed and are being installed in one of Holtec?s projects.
After the wagon is unloaded on wagon tippler, the sidearm charger places the empty wagon on a traverser table. The wagon is shifted to another rail track (exit track) through a wagon traverser, where the pusher ejects the empty wagon from traverser to exit track. The enclosed arrangement drawing and photograph shows the functioning of a wagon traverser.
The wagon shifter works at the same speed as the wagon tippler and both these equipment work in tandem. This way the space requirement for the rail tracks reduces to almost half. However, one parallel rail track needs to be constructed besides the track for removal of wagons.
Expected benefits
Savings in land cost and veritable size of plot. Benefits of wagon traverser are usually case specific, and in some cases, its inclusion could help the unit greatly.
Conclusion
Development in material handling system is a dynamic process and an emerging area of research. In the view of definition of a project -?completion of a unique activity in a specific time, cost and scope?- the selection of material handling system has become extremely imperative.
We can conclude that adoption of a new material handling concept can:
- Reduce the investment cost and handling time
- Reduce the number of equipment and dust generation
- Make the system more reliable.
About the authorJai P Gupta is Chief General Manager at HOLTEC Consulting Private Limited, and has been associated with the Indian cement industry for almost 35 years. The author has employed fresh concepts for handling of bulk material in cement as well as other industries, with equal ease and success.
Concrete
Smart Logistics is Rewriting Rules of Competition
Published
18 minutes agoon
April 13, 2026By
admin
Professor Procyon Mukherjee explains how end-to-end logistics, driven by network redesign, digital control towers and multimodal integration, is emerging as the primary lever of competitive advantage in the cement industry.
On the surface, cement is a commodity business—heavy, low-margin, and seemingly undifferentiated. But beneath that simplicity lies one of the most complex logistics challenges in global industry. Moving raw materials, clinker, and finished cement across vast geographies—often under volatile demand and razor-thin margins—means that logistics is not just a support function. It is the strategy.
In many markets, logistics accounts for up to 30 per cent of total cost. The implication is stark: companies that redesign their end-to-end logistics—from inbound flows to last-mile delivery—can fundamentally alter their competitive position. Across India, Europe, and China, leading cement players are doing exactly that. Their playbook offers a powerful lesson: the future of cement lies not in production efficiency alone, but in logistics intelligence.
From plant-centric to market-centric networks
For decades, cement companies designed their networks around limestone availability. Plants were built near quarries, and finished cement was transported long distances to markets. This model, while logical from a production standpoint, created massive outbound logistics costs.
Indian cement companies have begun to challenge this logic. The shift: decoupling clinker production from cement grinding. Clinker plants remain near limestone reserves, but grinding units are increasingly located close to consumption centers.
Case in point: India’s split-network model
Leading players such as UltraTech and Shree Cement have invested heavily in grinding units near urban demand clusters. The result:
• Lead distances reduced from 400–500 km to nearly 100–150 km
• Freight costs per ton significantly lowered
• Faster response to regional demand spikes
The insight is simple but powerful: move semi-finished goods (clinker), not finished goods (cement).
European players took a different but equally effective route.
Case: Port-centric logistics in Europe
Companies like Holcim and Cemex use
coastal shipping to move clinker and bulk
cement to strategically located port terminals. These terminals act as processing and distribution hubs. This model delivers:
• Lower inland transportation costs
• Flexibility to serve multiple markets
• Reduced carbon footprint through maritime transport
China, operating at an entirely different scale, has optimised networks through density and integration.
Case: China’s regional cluster model
Large producers coordinate production and distribution across tightly integrated regional
clusters, supported by rail and inland waterways. Centralised planning systems dynamically allocate supply across markets.
The common thread across all three regions is unmistakable: network design has shifted from production efficiency to market responsiveness.
The overlooked lever: Inbound logistics
While outbound logistics gets most of the attention, inbound flows—limestone, coal, gypsum, and alternative fuels—are equally critical. Yet, many companies still treat inbound logistics as a static function. In almost all firms inbound is still separate from outbound organisationally. Leaders are taking a different approach.
Case: Conveyor and short-haul rail systems (India and China)
Instead of relying on trucks, companies are investing in conveyor belts and dedicated rail links between quarries and plants. This reduces:
• Transportation cost variability
• Fuel dependency
• Operational disruptions
Case: Alternative fuel logistics (Europe)
European cement companies are aggressively using biomass and waste-derived fuels. This requires reverse logistics networks to collect, process, and transport waste materials. The payoff:
• Lower fuel costs
• Reduced emissions
• Greater supply resilience
The emerging principle: inbound logistics is not just about cost—it is about securing continuity and flexibility in production.
Winning the last mile
If inbound logistics ensures production continuity, outbound logistics determines market success.
Cement demand is fragmented, unpredictable, and often time-sensitive. Construction sites require reliable, just-in-time delivery. Delays can halt projects, making service reliability a key differentiator.
Case: Direct-to-site delivery in India
Cement companies are increasingly bypassing traditional dealer networks for large customers, delivering directly to construction sites. This model:
• Reduces handling and damage
• Improves delivery predictability
• Strengthens customer relationships
Case: Ready-Mix Concrete (RMC) integration
The rise of RMC has transformed cement logistics into a service business. Cement is no longer just transported—it is integrated into time-sensitive delivery cycles. This requires:
• Tight coordination between batching plants and delivery trucks
• Real-time scheduling
• Minimal buffer times
The lesson: logistics is no longer about moving products—it is about delivering outcomes.
The digital backbone: Real-time data
Perhaps the most transformative shift in cement logistics is the adoption of real-time data systems. Historically, cement supply chains operated with limited visibility. Dispatch decisions were often reactive, based on static plans and delayed information. That is changing rapidly.
Case: Holcim India’s Transport Analytics Centre
Holcim has built a centralised system connecting tens of thousands of trucks across its network. The platform tracks:
• Vehicle location
• Route efficiency
• Driver behaviour
• Fuel consumption
This enables dynamic routing, improved safety, and lower emissions.
Case: Dalmia Cement’s smart fleet management
Dalmia uses GPS-enabled tracking and analytics to optimise fleet utilisation. Real-time insights allow:
• Faster dispatch decisions
• Reduced idle time
• Improved on-time delivery
Case: Integrated Transport Management Systems (global)
Leading companies are deploying end-to-end TMS platforms that connect:
• Plants
• Warehouses
• Transporters
• Customers
The impact:
• Significant reduction in delivery delays
• End-to-end visibility
• Better coordination across stakeholders
The shift is profound: from fragmented logistics operations to centralised, data-driven control towers.
Inventory: From buffers to flow
Inventory has traditionally been the safety net of cement supply chains. Companies maintained high stock levels at depots to manage demand uncertainty.
But this came at a cost:
• High working capital
• Storage inefficiencies
• Risk of obsolescence
Leaders are now rethinking this approach.
Case: IoT-enabled inventory management (India)
Companies like ACC have deployed sensors in silos and warehouses to monitor stock levels in real time. This enables:
• Continuous visibility
• Automated replenishment
• Reduced stockouts and excess inventory
Case: Predictive replenishment (Europe and China)
Using demand forecasting models, companies dynamically adjust inventory levels across their networks. The result:
• Lower inventory holding costs
• Improved service levels
• Faster response to demand fluctuations
The new model is clear: inventory is no longer a buffer—it is a flow variable optimised in real time.
Multimodal logistics: the cost advantage
Given cement’s low value-to-weight ratio, transportation mode selection is critical.
Case: Ambuja Cement’s captive port strategy (India)
Ambuja has invested in ports and ships to move bulk cement and clinker along India’s coastline.
Benefits include:
• Lower transportation cost per ton
• Reduced dependency on road transport
• Improved delivery reliability
Case: Inland waterways in Europe and China
Both regions extensively use rivers and canals for bulk transport, significantly reducing costs and emissions. The takeaway: cost leadership in cement increasingly depends on multimodal integration.
Sustainability as strategy
Logistics is also central to the cement industry’s decarbonisation efforts.
Case: LNG-powered trucks (India)
Companies are experimenting with cleaner fuels to reduce emissions in road transport.
Case: CO2 transport networks (Europe)
As carbon capture technologies scale, logistics networks are being designed to transport captured CO2 for storage or reuse. Sustainability is no longer a compliance issue—it is becoming a source of competitive advantage.
Conclusion
In an industry where margins often hover in the single digits, logistics is no longer a back-end efficiency lever—it is the profit engine. With logistics accounting for 20 per cent to 30 per cent of total cement costs, even a 5 per cent to 10 per cent optimisation can expand EBITDA margins by 150–300 basis points—a swing large enough to redefine market leadership. Companies that have invested in network redesign, multimodal transport, and real-time control towers are already seeing double-digit reductions in freight costs and 20 per cent to 30 per cent improvements in delivery reliability. The implication is clear: in cement, the next wave of competitive advantage will not be mined from quarries—it will be engineered through smarter, faster, and more intelligent logistics networks.
About the author:
Professor Procyon Mukherjee, ex-CPO Lafarge-Holcim India, ex-President Hindalco, ex-VP Supply Chain Novelis Europe, has been an industry leader in logistics, procurement, operations and supply chain management. His career spans 38 years starting from Philips,
Alcan Inc (Indian Aluminum Company), Hindalco, Novelis and Holcim. He authored the book, ‘The Search for Value in Supply Chains’. He serves now as Visiting Professor in SP Jain Global, SIOM and as the Adjunct Professor at SBUP.
Concrete
Reimagining Logistics: Spatial AI and Digital Twins
Published
50 minutes agoon
April 13, 2026By
admin
Digital twins and spatial AI are transforming cement logistics by enabling real-time visibility, predictive decision-making, and smarter multi-modal operations across the supply chain. Dijam Panigrahi highlights how immersive AR/VR training is bridging workforce skill gaps, helping companies build faster, more efficient, and future-ready logistics systems.
As India accelerates infrastructure investment under flagship programs such as PM GatiShakti and the National Infrastructure Pipeline, the pressure on cement manufacturers to deliver reliably, efficiently, and cost-effectively has never been greater. Yet for all the modernisation that has taken place on the production side, the end-to-end logistics chain, from clinker dispatch to the last-mile delivery of bagged cement to construction sites, remains a domain riddled with inefficiencies, opacity and manual decision-making.
The good news is that a new generation of spatial computing technologies is now mature enough to transform this reality. Digital twins, spatial artificial intelligence (AI) and immersive augmented and virtual reality (AR/VR) training platforms are converging to offer cement producers something they have long sought: real-time visibility, autonomous decision-making at the operational edge, and a scalable solution to the persistent skills gap that hampers workforce performance.
Advancing logistics with digital twins
The cement supply chain is uniquely complex. A single integrated plant may manage limestone quarrying, kiln operations, grinding, packing and despatch simultaneously, with finished product flowing through rail, road, and waterway networks to reach hundreds of regional depots and distribution points. Coordinating this network using spreadsheets, siloed ERP data, and phone calls is not merely inefficient; it is a structural liability in a competitive market where delivery reliability is a key differentiator.
Digital twin technology offers a way out. A cement logistics digital twin is a continuously updated, three-dimensional virtual replica of the entire supply chain, from the truck loading bays at the plant to the inventory levels at district depots. By ingesting data from IoT sensors on conveyor belts and packing machines, GPS trackers on road and rail fleets, weighbridge records, and weather feeds, the digital twin provides planners with a single, authoritative picture of where every ton of cement is, in real time.
The value, however, goes well beyond visibility. Because the digital twin mirrors the physical system in dynamic detail, it can run scenario simulations before decisions are executed. If a primary rail corridor is disrupted, logistics managers can model alternative routing options, shifting volumes to road or coastal shipping, and assess the cost and time implications within minutes rather than days. If a packing line at the plant is running below capacity, the twin can automatically recalculate dispatch schedules downstream and alert depot managers to adjust receiving resources accordingly.
For cement companies operating multi-plant networks across geographies as varied as Rajasthan and the North-East, this kind of end-to-end situational awareness is transformative. It collapses information latency from hours to seconds, enables proactive rather than reactive logistics management, and creates the data foundation upon which AI-driven decision-making can be built. Companies that have deployed logistics digital twins in comparable heavy-industry contexts have reported reductions in transit time variability of up to 20 per cent and meaningful decreases in demurrage and detention costs, savings that flow directly to the bottom line.
Smart logistics operations
A digital twin is only as powerful as the intelligence layer that sits on top of it. This is where Spatial AI becomes the critical differentiator for cement logistics.
Traditional logistics management systems are reactive. They record what has happened and flag exceptions after the fact. Spatial AI systems, by contrast, are proactive. They continuously analyse the state of the logistics network as represented in the digital twin, identify emerging bottlenecks before they crystallise into delays, and recommend corrective actions.
At the plant gate, AI-powered visual inspection systems using spatial depth-sensing cameras can assess truck conditions, verify load integrity and confirm seal tamper status in seconds, replacing the manual checks that currently slow throughput. At the depot level, Spatial AI can monitor stock drawdown rates in real time, cross-reference them against pending customer orders and inbound shipment ETAs, and automatically trigger replenishment orders when safety thresholds are approached. In transit, AI systems processing GPS and telematics data can detect anomalous vehicle behaviour, including extended stops, route deviations, speed irregularities and alert fleet managers instantly.
Perhaps most significantly for Indian cement logistics, Spatial AI can optimise the complex multi-modal routing decisions that are central to competitive cost management. Given the variability in road quality, seasonal accessibility, rail rake availability, and regional demand patterns across India’s vast geography, the combinatorial complexity of routing optimisation is beyond human planners working with conventional tools. AI systems can process this complexity continuously and adapt routing recommendations as conditions change, reducing empty running, improving vehicle utilisation and cutting fuel costs.
The agentic dimension of modern AI is particularly relevant here. Agentic AI systems do not merely analyse and recommend; they act. In a cement logistics context, this means an AI system that can, within pre-authorised boundaries, directly communicate revised dispatch instructions to plant teams, update booking confirmations with freight forwarders and reallocate available rail rakes across plant locations, all without waiting for a human to process a recommendation and make a call. For logistics executives, this represents a genuine shift from managing a workforce to setting the rules of engagement and reviewing outcomes. The operational tempo achievable with agentic AI simply cannot be matched by human-in-the-loop systems working at the pace of emails and phone calls.
Bridging the skills gap
Technology investments in digital twins and spatial AI will deliver diminishing returns if the human workforce cannot operate effectively within the new systems they create. This is a challenge that India’s cement industry cannot afford to underestimate. The sector relies on a large, geographically dispersed workforce, including truck drivers, depot managers, despatch supervisors, fleet maintenance technicians, many of whom have been trained on paper-based processes and manual workflows. Retraining this workforce for a digitised, AI-augmented environment is a substantial undertaking, and conventional classroom or on-the-job training methods are poorly suited to the scale and pace required.
Immersive AR and VR training platforms offer a fundamentally different approach. By creating photorealistic, interactive simulations of logistics environments, such as a plant dispatch bay, a depot yard, the interior of a cement truck cab, allow workers to practice complex procedures and decision-making scenarios in a safe, consequence-free virtual environment. A depot manager can work through a simulated rail rake delay scenario, making decisions about customer allocation and communication
without the pressure of real orders being affected. A truck driver can practice the correct procedure for securing a load of bagged cement without the risk of a road incident.
The learning science case for immersive training is compelling. Studies consistently show that experiential, simulation-based learning produces faster skill acquisition and higher retention rates than didactic instruction, with some research indicating retention rates three to four times higher for VR-based training compared to classroom methods. For complex operational procedures where muscle memory and situational awareness matter as much as conceptual knowledge, the advantage of immersive simulation is even more pronounced.
Today’s leading cloud-based spatial computing platforms enable high-fidelity AR and VR training experiences to be delivered on standard mobile devices, removing the hardware barrier that has historically made immersive training impractical for large, distributed workforces. This is particularly relevant for cement companies with depots and logistics operations in tier-two and tier-three locations, where access to specialised training hardware cannot be assumed.
The integration of AR into live operations also creates ongoing learning opportunities beyond formal training programs. As an example, maintenance technicians equipped with AR overlays can receive step-by-step guidance for equipment procedures directly in their field of view, reducing error rates and service times for critical plant and fleet assets.
New strategy, new horizons
India’s cement industry is entering a period of intensifying competition, rising logistics costs, and demanding customers with shrinking tolerance for delivery variability. The companies that will lead over the next decade will be those that treat logistics not as a cost centre to be minimised, but as a strategic capability to be built.
Digital twins, spatial AI and immersive AR/VR training are not distant future technologies, they are deployable today on infrastructure that Indian cement companies already operate. The question is not whether to adopt them, but how quickly to do so and where to begin.
About the author:
Dijam Panigrahi is Co-Founder and COO of GridRaster Inc., a provider of cloud-based spatial computing platforms that power high-quality digital twin and immersive AR/VR experiences on mobile devices for enterprises. GridRaster’s technology is deployed across manufacturing, logistics and infrastructure sectors globally.
Concrete
Seamless Packaging Means Elevated Branding
Published
54 minutes agoon
April 13, 2026By
admin
The right packaging does more than protect a product; it protects reputation, efficiency and brand value. Marta Bortolotti, Division Manager Consumables, Haver & Boecker, discusses smart packaging solutions that are becoming a strategic priority for manufacturers.
When it comes to product packaging, every element, from design and materials to compatibility with machinery, product and closure type, plays a vital role in achieving both efficient function and a positive brand image. To maintain a competitive edge, producers must carefully evaluate their packaging choices.
Partner with an expert
Unlike providers who specialise solely in packaging, full-service manufacturers can combine their expertise in packing equipment and product analysis. They can provide bag recommendations that integrate seamlessly with machinery. This approach enhances efficiency, expedites the filling process and ensures operational flow — all while saving resources, preserving product and strengthening brand perception.
A full-service approach tackles common issues like bag leaks, poor sealing or inefficiencies in bag performance. By leveraging detailed testing processes, such as bag volume checks and valve inspections, some manufacturers ensure the bag material and design are tailored to each packing line and product. This precision minimises production disruptions, optimises workflow and delivers packaging that enhances brand visibility and market impact.
Analyse your operational needs
Some manufacturers conceptualise the full-service philosophy as a practical framework that ensures bags, equipment and products work as a cohesive system. By aligning all three pillars, they can create solutions that reduce waste, save resources, improve operational efficiency and maximise output to achieve the perfect flow.
To begin, an expert will analyse the product to define the ideal machine technology and design a packaging solution that fits seamlessly into the operation’s preexisting process. This holistic approach ensures each packing facility can tackle even the most challenging requirements with precision and efficiency. Whether an operation is making a switch from open-mouth to valve-bag equipment and wants to ensure it goes smoothly or is simply looking for inefficiencies with their current packing line, analysing your bags should be a part of the equation.
Test and fine-tune your production line
The process begins with consultations and testing to gain a full understanding of the facility’s products and systems. The manufacturer’s engineers then create a custom bag report and fine-tune designs after thorough testing with the machinery. Finally, look for a manufacturer that can manage the entire supply chain, from bag testing to supply, ensuring a smooth and hassle-free experience. Some manufacturers also provide bag optimisation plans focused solely on the performance of existing bags to ensure they align with the demands of the production line. Through analysis, these manufacturers identify areas for improvement, offering specific recommendations to enhance bag materials, structure and compatibility. This method not only increases productivity and efficiency but also ensures cost-effectiveness and reliability by minimising downtime, reducing waste, optimising resource use and delivering consistent results across all operations.
A bag that reflects your brand
More than just a functional component, a bag serves as a powerful branding tool and a visual business card for each company. While some companies work with multiple providers for packaging, partnering with a single OEM expert, who understands the product, equipment, and production goals, provides unbeatable efficiency and peace of mind. With an integrated approach, every bag becomes a powerful asset for the brand and business.
About the author:
Marta Bortolotti, Division Manager , Consumables, Haver & Boeckers a driven packaging solutions leader focused on consumables, helping businesses achieve efficient operations, consistent quality, and long-term competitiveness through continuous learning and innovation.
Smart Logistics is Rewriting Rules of Competition
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Ultra Concrete Age
Smart Logistics is Rewriting Rules of Competition
Reimagining Logistics: Spatial AI and Digital Twins
Seamless Packaging Means Elevated Branding
Beyond Despatch: Building a Strategic Supply Chain Process

