twitteryou tubefacebookacp

MEA IoT spending to hit US$7.8bn in 2017 as digital transformation takes place

The ?manufacturing operations? use case will account for more than 51 per cent of this investment. (Image source: Jack Baldwin/Flickr)

The Middle East and Africa (MEA) Internet of Things (IoT) market is forecast to grow growing 19.6 per cent year-on-year in 2017 to total a US$7.8bn with manufacturing and transportation leading the way with related spending of US$1.3bn each, according to a recent report

The Worldwide Semiannual Internet of Things Spending Guide from International Data Corporation (IDC) revealed that this compares favourably to the healthy 18.1 per cent growth seen in 2016, with IDC attributing the market?s performance to the proliferation of digital transformation initiatives across the region as businesses and government entities strive to boost productivity and improve efficiency.

?The MEA IoT market is becoming increasingly competitive, enabling organisations to source a range of innovative digital solutions aimed at transforming business operations, improving the customer experience, and enhancing employee engagement,? said Wale Babalola, research analyst for telecommunications, IoT, and digital media at IDC MEA. 

?IDC expects the manufacturing, transportation, and utilities industries to see the highest levels of IoT-related spending in 2017 as organisations across these verticals look to digitalise their operations and improve their value proposition across different lines of business. The commitment of service providers, application developers, and OEMs to developing purpose built end-to-end IoT solutions is serving as a major driver of the growing adoption we are seeing across the region.?

Manufacturing organisations will lead the way in 2017, with IDC forecasting IoT-related spending of US$1.3bn for this vertical. The ?manufacturing operations? use case will account for more than 51 per cent of this investment. ?Manufacturing operations? is an IoT use case that supports digitally-executed manufacturing and the way in which manufacturers use intelligent and interconnected I/O (input output) tools (e.g., sensors, actuators, drives, vision/video equipment) to enable different components in the manufacturing field (e.g., machine tools, robots, conveyor belts) to autonomously exchange information, trigger actions, and control each other independently.

The transportation industry is also forecast to see IoT-related spending of around US$1.3bn in 2017. The ?freight monitoring? use case is expected to account for US$849mn of this figure, which aptly highlights the increasing importance of monitoring goods and improving productivity. The use of IoT for freight management purposes (air, railroad, land, or sea) is based on RFID, GPS, GPRS, and GIS technology to create intelligent, internet-connected transportation systems. These systems perform intelligent recognition, location, tracking, and monitoring of freight and cargo by exchanging information and real-time communications via wireless, satellite, and other channels.

IDC forecasts IoT-related spending by MEA utilities to reach US$918mn in 2017, with investments around ?smart grid? technologies to account for more than 82 per cent of this total. Smart grids are rapidly gaining traction across the region as municipalities increasingly see the value proposition in deploying related solutions in an effort to efficiently distribute resources to their respective end customers.

?Numerous smart city projects are already underway across the region, and the propagation of such initiatives will continue to fuel IoT adoption by both public and private sector organisations,? said Babalola. ?Saudi Arabia and the UAE are leading the charge when it comes to smart cities, so it makes sense that these two countries will account for the highest contributions to overall IoT investment in MEA during 2017, with a combined value of more than US$1.6 billion.?