R&M at UPM-Kymmene: An educational journey

Ian Farrell
Tags: maintenance and reliability

The concept of best practice is easy to describe and discuss. The more difficult part is determining your path toward reliability and maintenance best practice and, more importantly, sustaining standards and developing a continuous improvement culture.

However, being armed with the best techniques, procedures and systems does not mean that you will enjoy a trouble-free life with the best reliability figures on the planet

The approach to maintenance and equipment reliability must be considered in full view of the papermaking business with all parties and departments aware of the targets and goals of the individual mills and business units. In short, each department, and in most cases this refers to the daily interface between production and maintenance, must be aware of the points of focus.

Process and equipment reliability
Above all, a production plan must exist in response to the market demand. The maintenance effort must then be built around the production plan to support the business. The risks involved in the delivery of the production plan from the point of view of each department much remain in full focus of all concerned. 

The impact of our short- and long-term decisions is seen in how the business functions. The balance of the “risk” component is different if you work in operations or maintenance. The risk of running equipment beyond repair intervals is clear to maintenance personnel – the risk of not meeting the market or not achieving production targets is clear to operations personnel. 

The management of this risk can be made easier if the right things are done to support the business. 

This paper will outline the work carried out in the United Kingdom by the Caledonian and Shotton mills during a current best practice audit to identify where they ranked. This is information that the mills will now use to develop their maintenance departments in the continued support for the papermaking business within UPM-Kymmene. 

UPM-Kymmene – Caledonian
Caledonian Paper is the UK’s only manufacturer of magazine paper. The annual production capability is in excess of 250,000 tons. The mill services the local markets as well as exporting to Europe, the United States and Asia. The mill is situated on the southwest of Scotland some 35 miles from Glasgow.

UPM-Kymmene – Shotton
Shotton Paper is the largest newsprint manufacturer in the UK. The output is around some 470,000 tons, which in turn supplies 20 percent of the daily needs of the entire UK newspaper industry. Shotton Paper recycles around 350,000 tons of old newspapers and magazines. The mill is situated in North Wales only a few miles from the city of Chester.

Current best practice audits
The maintenance management of the Caledonian and Shotton mills had a desire to benchmark their actual equipment reliability and draw comparison against the current best practice. The goals of the exercise were to: 

  1. Increase the awareness of the organization in the area of best practice.
  2. Build a positively challenging relationship across the maintenance departments of Shotton and Caledonian.
  3. Create a learning opportunity for the development and education of maintenance people.
  4. Identify the most important improvement opportunities and encourage the most appropriate actions.
  5. Create an atmosphere where people will readily share experiences and information.
  6. Maximize effectiveness of our people.

Traditional maintenance audits may center around functions which do not offer a chance to improve on the effectiveness of maintenance. These may be driven around a review of the budget or the establishment of meetings and brainstorming sessions. 

It is fundamentally obvious that unless an organization is prepared to expose itself to a system where feedback can be given on all maintenance-related issues, then the opportunity to create improvement may be minimized or lost. 

The opportunity to audit our maintenance performance in line with world-class comparisons gave Caledonian and Shotton a first-class opportunity to develop. The benefit of having internally trained personnel facilitated by IDCON was viewed as a further opportunity for the development of our maintenance practices. 

We realized through our communication that an opportunity was there to have a look at how each mill shaped up to the world class utilizing a best practice audit. 

The CBP process 

The input data
The audit commenced by each team selecting their audit team. In our case, we selected four maintenance people from each mill. The individuals were trained in maintenance auditing by IDCON. 

In its simplest form, the CBP exercise looks at “what is” vs. “what could be.” 

The audit process involves the following: 

From the questionnaire, three further areas were developed. 

A comprehensive summary can be built up of the key maintenance data along with operations and safety statistics.

The audit training
From the summary documentation, it is possible to build up a fairly accurate picture of how things are in the participating mills. Also, it starts to awaken a feeling that the maintenance practices are not all that they could or should be. 

A picture starts to be formed in the minds of the audit teams that the exercise that they are about to take part in will not only be informative but extremely useful for the ongoing development of the mill maintenance system and practices. 

The audit training was aimed at giving the team members the confidence to be able to conduct an audit in an effective professional manner. The training of the audit teams was carried out at the Shotton mill over a two-day period. It was carried out by Christer Idhammar. 

The training mission was to educate and unify the audit teams in both the approach and definition. The planning and scheduling process was to be linked specifically to the audit programmer. We needed to assign the individual notes of the team.

Christer’s approach when training the teams was a key factor. He spent a lot of time positioning the importance of the project and explaining its potential benefits, if carried out properly. 

The training language was simple and a systematic path was followed through the business needs and how maintenance can have a major impact on the results of a business. 

This was then developed to the items and functions which were to be audited. The pre-prepared documentation was explored to ensure that everyone fully understood the task ahead and the importance of their part. 

The teams became familiar with the questionnaires and methods to be undertaken in the audit. The initial questionnaire concentrated on front-line maintenance and the impact of the individuals connected with the maintenance effort.

The seminar
This called for the auditor to ask questions and rank each answer from 1 (poor) to 10 (excellent). For example, how well do we:

After the general questions, some more detail was required around the planning and scheduling of daily and shutdown work. This was to measure the effectiveness around the maintenance effort from break-in through to planned and scheduled. 

The final stage of this aspect brought together the questions around preventive maintenance and planning and scheduling. For example:

The survey results would be presented at the end of the weeklong audit along with all other data. The audit team found themselves taking on different roles as documenter, presenter and information processor. The process can be summarized.

Audit detail
The 270 questions are detailed around CBP elements of world-class maintenance. When examined, there is not one single item which does not have relevance to a maintainer. 

The elements not only proved relevant to the Caledonian and Shotton mills, but started the teams on an educational journey, a voyage which would challenge and develop their ways of thinking about maintenance. 

The interviews were broken down in 10 categories:

  1. Preventive maintenance
  2. Planning and scheduling
  3. Root cause problem elimination
  4. Technical database
  5. Materials management
  6. Leadership
  7. Safety
  8. Skills
  9. Equipment condition
  10. Engineering

The 10 categories or maintenance processes can be broken down via subprocesses to the elements which are the lowest level of detail in a key process. 

KEY PROCESS – Processes that are key to the discipline of maintenance and can be used to support the papermaking business. 

SUBPROCESS – Lower in the hierarchy than a process, but when grouped with several subprocesses becomes a process. 

ELEMENTS – A CBP is equal to an element, which is the lowest level of detail in a key process. It is the best way to do something. 

KEY PROCESS – Planning and scheduling.

SUBPROCESS – Work request.

ELEMENTS – Scope, definition, priority, documentation.

The elements are put together as questions. The questions then take the auditors through the key process areas. For example: 

SUBPROCESS – Planning and scheduling



The data to the element questions being gathered and scored is then put together and averaged against each of the subprocess areas under the key process. 

The subprocess areas when viewed as a graph or bar chart can be tracked against CBP. A score of 85 is rated as world class. The Caledonian and Shotton mills fell short of world class, which was a prediction made by the host teams in each case.

Results
The results were obtained by giving each element a score. When compiled, we have a score for each subprocess. The scores for the subprocesses are then added together. When averaged, we have the overall key process score. 

The education of the audit teams really starts to develop at this stage – the awareness of their own mill’s shortcomings is instantly apparent. The comments start to come through. 

“We say we do this, but we never do!” 
“We have a maintenance management system which could be used to greater effect.”
“Why don’t we have documented standards.”
“We are good at maintenance, but we could be much better”. 
“If everyone in my organization knew our direction, we could improve rapidly”. 

The first aspect in the maintenance education is to find out where you are – i.e., the starting point and when the information is available to develop world-class targets. Then it is easy to define the area where everyone would like to get to. 

The method used to audit and obtain results focused on the evaluation and measurement of key equipment reliability and the maintenance processes. 

The simplification of the process for data gathering and analysis develops the learning experience and broadens the educational horizon. 

Caledonian and Shotton, when compared to other similar mills (not named), came out ahead in the overall stakes. This we felt was good for our mills and indicated the sense of great pride to be part of the UPM-Kymmene network of sites. This pride developed through the strong relationships and information sharing already in existence globally.

Key process scores
As stated previously, the key process scores for both sites fell short of world class (not significantly). However, we placed an expectation on each mill to use the audit as a means to improve. 

There were similarities and stark differences in the final results. This had a positive effect on the audit teams.

When a good score was achieved, they could draw from learning how that score came about. When a poor score was achieved, a positive determination to create improvement now exists. Each mill now had the support of the other. Learning is also possible via the UPM-Kymmene group.

From the key process scores, the top three improvement areas were identified for each mill. Some progress has been made in these areas to date. 

Shotton key improvement areas

Caledonian key improvement areas 

Conclusions
The audit gave Caledonian and Shotton a unique opportunity to view each other in a “no holds barred” situation.

The mills are now committed to making improvements in every direction. The mills are now committed to working together.

The audit gave the individuals involved an educational experience second to none. They were able to view two organizations from the inside, an opportunity which can only present itself in this structured manner as set out by IDCON.

It is now up to the maintenance management of each mill to develop their entire maintenance strategy in support of the papermaking business.

Inside UPM-Kymmene, there are around 53 paper machines. We have only touched on maintenance benchmarking in the past. An opportunity exists within UPM-Kymmene to use a tailor-made organized benchmark framework to carry out benchmark audits and reviews in a planned ongoing basis. 

About the author:
Ian Farrell is a maintenance leader at UPM-Kymmene, one of the world’s leading forest industry companies, with production plants and sales companies on every continent.