69成人导航

U of T alumnus uses automation, robotics to keep Canadian Tire's operations rolling

photo of Carlos Menezes
Carlos Menezes, Canadian Tire鈥檚 vice-president of distribution and operations planning, is working with U of T researchers to automate the process of unloading shipping containers in its Brampton, Ont. distribution centre (photo by Jason Bailey)

滨迟鈥檚 Carlos Menezes鈥檚 job to keep things moving. Thousands of things: tea kettles, barbeques, car parts, sleeping bags, garden gazebos. From his vantage at the centre of Canadian Tire鈥檚 vast supply chain, he tracks products from more than 2,000 suppliers worldwide. They鈥檙e shipped across oceans, transported by railway to four national distribution centres and loaded onto trucks that deliver them to 500 Canadian Tire stores, where you lift them off the shelf in perfect condition and take them home.

Like any extraordinarily complex system, the retailer鈥檚 supply chain benefits from precision engineering 鈥 and Menezes, Canadian Tire鈥檚 vice-president of distribution and operations planning, has built his career on continuously fine-tuning it.

鈥淚f you think about industrial engineering happening wherever there鈥檚 people, systems and process, there鈥檚 always an opportunity to improve and to optimize,鈥 says the University of Toronto engineering alumnus.

鈥淲ith the Canadian Tire supply chain being as large and as complex as it is, there鈥檚 no shortage of opportunities to find ways to make our operation run optimally.鈥

The way products are designed, created and moved through today鈥檚 global marketplace has undergone a seismic shift in recent years. Advanced manufacturing 鈥 which encompasses innovations in materials, processes and distribution logistics 鈥 combined with escalating transportation costs, has made the retail industry more competitive than ever. And for a company with locations spread coast-to-coast across the second-largest country in the world, even minuscule improvements in operational efficiency can yield big savings and confer a valuable edge.

鈥淲hen you factor in our inbound transportation costs, outbound transportation costs and the handling of our goods in our distribution centres, we鈥檙e into hundreds of millions of dollars,鈥 says Menezes.

鈥淓ven if we could figure out a way to shave a point or two off, we鈥檙e talking tens of millions. I鈥檓 always thinking of ways to make our operations more efficient while maintaining service, quality, and above all, the safety of my workers.鈥

To help hone that competitive edge, Menezes turned to his alma mater and Goldie Nejat, an associate professor in the department of mechanical and industrial engineering and director of the Institute for Robotics & Mechatronics.

Menezes and his team had developed a list of 17 projects they thought might benefit from the introduction of robotics and automation to their workflow. They then toured Nejat through Canadian Tire鈥檚 distribution centre located in Brampton, Ont. and settled on the ideal place to start: automating the process of unloading shipping containers.

When a 53-foot shipping container arrives at the distribution centre, it鈥檚 been loaded floor to ceiling, back to front, with whatever else came off the ship. 鈥淚t might be 6,000 kettles,鈥 says Menezes. 鈥淚t might be 3,000 kettles, in two different models, and 3,000 coffee makers in five colours and a dozen different kinds of exercise equipment.鈥

A human then needs to start removing each item and sorting it into pallets. Forklift drivers move full pallets to the designated section of the distribution centre, where the products are available to be re-packed into trucks and delivered to stores. The distribution centre runs 20 hours a day, with staff working in two shifts from 5:45 a.m. through 1:45 a.m., seven days a week. 滨迟鈥檚 hard, physical, repetitive work.

鈥淭he current process is very time consuming, and that costs us a lot of money. 滨迟鈥檚 also tying up a receiving door for probably 20 hours a day 鈥 if that container of kettles is tying up that door, guess what: something else can鈥檛 get in there,鈥 says Menezes.

鈥淪o what we鈥檙e trying to do is twofold: one, we鈥檙e trying to see if robotics could speed up the offloading process; and the other piece is we think there鈥檚 going to be a big health and safety benefit for our folks.鈥

Menezes and his operations team are no strangers to robots in their midst. Five years ago, they introduced automated guided vehicles (AGVs) into the A.J. Billes Distribution Centre in Brampton, Ont. and, in the summer of 2017, they added them to Bolton as well. The AGVs are driverless forklifts that automatically deliver pallets around the floor along pre-programmed paths. The Brampton distribution centre is also home to an elaborate custom robotics system that receives shipments of vehicle tires and sorts, moves, puts away and retrieves them 鈥 entirely without human intervention.

鈥淵ou can imagine if your role was to be handling tires for 10 hours a day鈥 with all of the SUVs and light truck tires on the road today, the tires are getting bigger and heavier to handle,鈥 Menezes says. 鈥淲e definitely had to find a way to make life easier for our staff. And being Canadian Tire, we handle a lot of tires.鈥

Menezes hopes to have his newest robotic prototype in place in the next 12 to 18 months. And, like a true industrial engineer, he鈥檚 already considering how to scale and make his system smarter and more efficient 鈥 he and Nejat even discussed the potential of integrating artificial intelligence into a robotic packing system.

鈥淚 think in the past year here at Canadian Tire, robotics and automation has really taken off, in terms of us thinking about it, being much more open to the ideas.鈥 Menezes says. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got to continually move with where the industry is going, and continually push the envelope to find better ways to do things, new ways to do things, and if you鈥檙e not trying that, you鈥檙e going to be left behind.鈥

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