sustainability/logistics – transportation and distribution management (4b) technology enabled...

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Sustainability/Logistics – Transportation and Distribution Management (4b) Technology Enabled Capability Demonstration Alan Santucci [email protected] 973-724-4737 DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT B: Distribution authorized to U.S. Government agencies only (21 June 2012). Other requests for this document shall be referred to Director, US Army Armament Research, Development & Engineering Center, Picatinny Arsenal, NJ 07806-5000.

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Page 1: Sustainability/Logistics – Transportation and Distribution Management (4b) Technology Enabled Capability Demonstration Alan Santucci alan.santucci@us.army.mil

Sustainability/Logistics – Transportation and Distribution Management (4b)

Technology Enabled Capability Demonstration

Alan Santucci

[email protected]

973-724-4737

DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT B: Distribution authorized to U.S. Government agencies only (21 June 2012). Other requests for this document shall be referred to Director, US Army Armament Research, Development & Engineering Center, Picatinny Arsenal, NJ 07806-5000.

Page 2: Sustainability/Logistics – Transportation and Distribution Management (4b) Technology Enabled Capability Demonstration Alan Santucci alan.santucci@us.army.mil

Challenge: Formulate a S&T program to leverage all available conveyance modes to ensure supply delivery, to increase the reliability and timeliness of supplies delivery, and to be able to predict when and where all classes of supplies will be needed. In addition, the program will devise methods to reduce waste and use it to provide power.

Problem Statement: The Army needs improved capability to tactically transport and reliably deliver consumables to Forward Operating Bases (FOBs) and smaller satellite bases in remote, dispersed, austere locations with reduced supplier and equipment risk, including improved efficient and safe methods for disposing waste.

Objectives: Near term (FY17): Develop tools that efficiently manage, track, redirect, account for and distribute supplies to support forced entry, early entry, and non-contiguous operations

Supply Chain

Logistics

Enhanced Energy Agility

Power and Energy Mgmt.

Unmanned Ground

Autonomy

Challenge Boundary Conditions:Who: For Forward Operating Bases with applications to expeditionary bases (Small Units in COPs and PBs) What: Rapidly deliver significant quantities (volume, weight, etc) of supplies. Air drop and convoy operations - develop ability to conduct rapid movement of emergency, planned, or critical logistics support that enables precise delivery of supplies and repair parts to forward battlefield locations, medical evacuation operations and relief operations

How: Representative 2011 Afghanistan-like environment baseline

Sustainability/Logistics – Transport, Distribute & Dispose

Challenge Statement 4b Original

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Page 3: Sustainability/Logistics – Transportation and Distribution Management (4b) Technology Enabled Capability Demonstration Alan Santucci alan.santucci@us.army.mil

Challenge: Formulate a S&T program to leverage all available conveyance modes to ensure supply delivery, to increase the reliability and timeliness of supplies delivery, and to be able to predict when and where all classes of supplies will be needed. provide improved intelligent anticipatory tools and capabilities to manage, track, redirect, account for, and distribute supplies in an autonomous manner in order to provide improved sustainment effectiveness and efficiency and reduce unnecessary risk to soldiers and equipment.

Problem Statement: The Army needs improved capabilities to tactically transport and reliably deliver consumables to Forward Operating Bases (FOBs) and smaller satellite bases in remote, dispersed, austere locations with reduced supplier and equipment risk, including improved efficient and safe methods for equipment retrograde operations. Forward units engaged in decisive action/operations lack the ability to accurately identify sustainment requirements and execute distribution decisions which often causes unnecessary exposure to soldiers delivering supplies.

Objectives: Near term (FY17): Develop tools that efficiently manage, track, redirect, account for and distribute supplies to support forced entry, early entry, and non-contiguous operations. Develop and demonstrate a Distribution Management tool that optimizes scheduling of tactical transport modes to more efficiently distribute sustainment.

Integrate sustainment data from GCSS-A, legacy STAMIS & embedded sensors to increase the reliability and effectiveness of the tactical supply chain, to be able to anticipate when and where all classes of supplies will be needed.

Provide the ability to monitor consumption to optimize energy efficiency of delivery and reduce unnecessary exposure to the distribution force

Challenge Boundary Conditions:Who: For Forward Operating Bases with applications to expeditionary bases (Small Units in COPs and PBs) Tactical Commanders conducting decisive operations (Brigade and below).

What: Rapidly deliver significant quantities (volume, weight, etc) of supplies. Air drop and convoy operations - develop ability to conduct rapid movement of emergency, planned, or critical logistics support that enables precise delivery of supplies and repair parts to forward battlefield locations, medical operations and relief operations Develop a Distribution Management Tool (DMT) and autonomous transport technology to improve our ability to support forward units engaged in decisive action/operations: 1) to more accurately identify troop requirements (what, where, when, and how much is needed), 2) provide increased flexibility to execute distribution decisions.

How: Worldwide expeditionary operations based on regional threat environment. The DMT will use data from the mesh network to provide anticipatory sustainment; extend technology to support unit-to-unit distribution; leverage existing S&T and JCTD efforts (Next Gen Wireless Communication (NGWC), Autonomous Mobility Appliqué System (AMAS), Precision Airdrop, Autonomous MHE, Adaptive Packaging/Platforms as they apply to optimizing distribution and transportation management.

Sustainability/Logistics – Transport, Distribute & Dispose Transportation &

Distribution ManagementChallenge Statement 4b Revised

3

Enhanced Energy Agility

Supply Chain Logistics

Power and Energy Mgmt.

Unmanned Ground

Autonomy

Page 4: Sustainability/Logistics – Transportation and Distribution Management (4b) Technology Enabled Capability Demonstration Alan Santucci alan.santucci@us.army.mil

Challenge: Formulate an S&T program to provide improved intelligent anticipatory tools and capabilities to manage, track, redirect, account for, and distribute supplies in an autonomous manner in order to provide improved sustainment effectiveness and efficiency and reduce unnecessary risk to soldiers and equipment.

Problem Statement: Forward units engaged in decisive action/operations lack the ability to accurately identify sustainment requirements and execute distribution decisions which often causes unnecessary exposure to soldiers delivering supplies.

Objectives: Near term (FY17): Develop and demonstrate a Distribution Management tool that optimizes scheduling of tactical transport modes to more efficiently distribute sustainment.

Integrate sustainment data from GCSS-A, legacy STAMIS & embedded sensors to increase the reliability and effectiveness of the tactical supply chain, to be able to anticipate when and where all classes of supplies will be needed.

Provide the ability to monitor consumption to optimize energy efficiency of delivery and reduce unnecessary exposure to the distribution force

Challenge Boundary Conditions:Who: Tactical Commanders conducting decisive operations (Brigade and below). What: Develop a Distribution Management Tool (DMT) and autonomous transport technology to improve our ability to support forward units engaged in decisive action/operations: 1) to more accurately identify troop requirements (what, where, when, and how much is needed), and 2) to provide increased flexibility to execute distribution decisions.

How: The DMT will use data from the mesh network to provide anticipatory sustainment; extend technology to support unit-to-unit distribution; leverage existing S&T and JCTD efforts (Next Gen Wireless Communication (NGWC), Autonomous Mobility Appliqué System (AMAS), Precision Airdrop, Autonomous MHE, Adaptive Packaging/Platforms) as they apply to optimizing distribution and transportation management.

Enhanced Energy Agility

Supply Chain Logistics

Power and Energy Mgmt.

Unmanned Ground

Autonomy Transportation & Distribution Management

Page 5: Sustainability/Logistics – Transportation and Distribution Management (4b) Technology Enabled Capability Demonstration Alan Santucci alan.santucci@us.army.mil

Purpose:

Demonstrate an integrated sustainment distribution capability that focuses on an “informed pull” to deliver all classes of supply to the right place at the right time in the right quantity while minimizing unnecessary exposure to those engaged in decisive operations.

Products: •Distribution Management Tool (DMT)•Unmanned Distribution Support Vehicles•Adaptive Cargo Platforms•Sustainment Intelligence Reports

Payoff: •Improved distribution management •Increased efficiency•Reduced exposure events •Reduced sustainment loss

Sustainability/Logistics – Transportation & Distribution Management 4b

Rapid Innovation Funds2 Contracts – $3.26M

Activities FY13 FY14 FY15 FY16 FY17 Total

Distribution Management tool (ERDC) 14.4

Autonomous MHE & Adaptive Packaging/ Platforms (ARDEC)

14.6

Autonomous Transport Technologies (TARDEC) 6.6

Precision Air Drop (NSRDEC) 7.6

System Integration\Demo

Funding ($M) 4.4 12 11.4 11.3 4.1 43.2

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Total $43M

4 6

5 6

4 6

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Page 6: Sustainability/Logistics – Transportation and Distribution Management (4b) Technology Enabled Capability Demonstration Alan Santucci alan.santucci@us.army.mil

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Demonstrated Future Approach: Develop and demonstrate a Distribution Management tool that optimizes scheduling of tactical transport modes to more efficiently distribute sustainment to Forward Operating Bases (FOBs) and smaller satellite bases

Allow commander’s an “informed pull” – to reduce unnecessary exposure

Sustainability/Logistics – Transportation & Distribution Management 4b

Distribution Management Tool• Decrease risk to drivers• Reduce frustrated cargo• Decrease Energy use

1

Autonomous Material Handling and Adaptive

Platforms• Increases efficiency• Reduce troop to task load /

unload time• Reduce time to offload

cargo aircraft• Reduce cargo

reconfiguration time

2

Autonomous Transport Technologies• Decrease ground transportation accidents • Increase throughput through sustainment visibility• Decrease physical and mental load on operator• Increase Convoy Speed and Security

3

Precision Airdrop• Reduce sustainment loss

4