“Our
technologies address secular growth trends where our customers need our support
to become more competitive, resilient and sustainable. Siemens is experiencing
significantly above-market growth. Today we announce an investment strategy to
boost future growth, drive innovation and increase resilience,” said Roland
Busch, President and Chief Executive Officer of Siemens AG.
“The
investments underpin our strategy of combining the real and the digital worlds
– as well as our focus on diversification and local-for-local business. We are
clearly doubling down on our strong global presence to support growth in the
most relevant markets in the world.”
In addition,
there is an expected increase of around €0.5 billion in research and
development (R&D), such as artificial intelligence and the industrial
metaverse, in fiscal year 2023 versus prior year. This R&D is focused on strengthening
Siemens’ leading position in core technologies including simulation, digital
twins, artificial intelligence or power electronics, as well as supporting the
development of the Siemens Xcelerator open digital business platform. The
company recently announced a partnership with Microsoft to speed up code
generation for industry automation by using ChatGPT. With NVIDIA, Siemens is
working to build the industrial metaverse to improve design, planning, production
and operation of factories and infrastructures.
New and
additional capacities in Southeast Asia
To meet
growing demand in Southeast Asia, Siemens today announced an entirely new high-tech
factory in Singapore, which will be developed using Siemens' own leading digital
twin and innovative, intelligent hardware technologies. Investment in the factory will be around
€200 million. The plant will set a new standard for connectivity to
showcase the possibilities of digitalization, as well as incorporating
highly-automated manufacturing processes. The investment will create over 400 jobs.
“Siemens’ new high-tech factory in Singapore will leverage our trusted hub status and strong advanced manufacturing capabilities to meet rising demand across Southeast Asia’s high-growth markets. Manufacturing remains a key pillar of Singapore’s economy and we welcome Siemens’ collaborations with our local ecosystem to better serve customers in the region through the use of new digital and automation technologies. We look forward to deepening our partnership with Siemens and creating good jobs for Singaporeans in the process,” said Png Cheong Boon, Chairman of the Singapore Economic Development Board (EDB).
All-regions strategy
with wave of global investments
As part of its investment
strategy and fast-growing business in China, Siemens will also expand its digital
factory in Chengdu to serve the local growth opportunities in China for China, investing
€140 million (RMB 1.1bn) and creating 400 new jobs. Many of Siemens’ Chinese customers are early
adopters of new technologies especially in digitalization and high-tech
manufacturing. This is why Siemens also announced the investment in a new
digital R&D Innovation Center in Shenzhen to speed up development of motion
control systems with digitalization and power electronics technology. The
Siemens Xcelerator open digital business platform was launched in China in November
2022.
Series of
announcements
Earlier this year, Siemens committed to expand production
in Trutnov, Czech Republic, to enhance capacity at its WEF Global Lighthouse
Factory in Amberg, Germany. Moreover, Siemens invests €30 million to expand its
switchgear plant in Frankfurt-Fechenheim, Germany, while Siemens Mobility recently
announced spending
$220 million to build a new
rolling stock factory in Lexington, North Carolina, to meet growing demand
for passenger trains in the United States. The plant will create more than 500
jobs by 2028.
The planned €2 billion investments and expected
increase of around €0.5 billion in research and development include Siemens
Healthineers.
115 years in Singapore
The investment in Singapore will create jobs within several functions, such as advanced manufacturing, supply chain management, quality management, finance and others. Siemens set up its first technical bureau in Singapore in 1908, the first German industrial company to do so, and celebrates its 115th anniversary in 2023. Siemens currently employs around 1,200 people in Singapore.