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Can innovation be planned?

Europe’s leading producer of heavy plate steel presents the “Dillinger Day of Innovation”

© AG der Dillinger Hüttenwerke

© AG der Dillinger Hüttenwerke

Can innovation be planned? The “Dillinger Day of Innovation,” held June 9, 2016 at the Stadthalle in Dillingen, demonstrated clearly that innovation is no accident when it comes to a globally active, highly modern steel manufacturer like AG der Dillinger Hüttenwerke (Dillinger). Numerous internal and external lectures, discussions, poster sessions and clips offered the roughly 350 guests interesting insights into innovative research and development work involving various Dillinger products and processes.

“Today we are capable of producing 2,000 different steel grades. The trend here is toward increasingly complex technical requirements, such as for steel that is simultaneously stronger and tougher, or heavy plate in special dimensions or for use in arctic conditions,” Dr. Bernd Münnich, Chief Technical Officer at Dillinger, said in his opening remarks. “Especially in an economic environment that is becoming increasingly difficult, research and development of innovative products and processes plays an absolutely decisive role in securing the future.”

The ability to plan innovation and the conditions it requires were also the focus of a subsequent podium discussion with Minister for Economic Affairs Anke Rehlinger, Dr. Bernd Münnich, innovation manager Benno van Aerssen, Prof. Dr. Frank Mücklich, Chair of Functional Materials at the University of Saarland and Head of the Material Engineering Center Saarland, and Prof. Dr. Andreas Kugi of the Institute for Automation and Control Technology at Vienna Technical University. The central conclusion: “Innovation requires bright minds and strong networks, but also reliable underlying economic conditions.”

Minister Anke Rehlinger thinks Saarland is essentially well prepared here: “The Saarland industrial region possesses efficient research clusters and innovation networks that now must be encouraged and expanded.” Rehlinger also stressed, however, that innovative activity requires reliable underlying conditions. “We cannot allow our industry to be stifled by things such as additional burdens from carbon emissions trading, which countries outside of the EU do not have to bear. This endangers the international competitiveness of the companies – and therefore their innovation potential as well.”

Source: Dillinger Hüttenwerke