As food and drink manufacturing equipment gets ever more sophisticated, facilities and equipment require increasingly regular needs for upgrades and replacement of obsolete equipment. It is the responsibility of an Industrial Electrician to ensure the safe and efficient maintenance and repair of facility electrical equipment.
Industrial Electricians, perform installations, monitoring, maintenance, repair, and/or design modification of high-tech distributed manufacturing and industrial process control systems across the distillery and wider site.
If you decide to embark upon a career as an Industrial Electrician, you will need to have an extensive technical and mechanical knowledge of electrical components as well as electrical safety practices and regulations.
The role often involves the production of electrical blueprints, schematics, wiring diagrams and instructions. Increasingly electricians use 2D and 3D CAD design software to ensure wiring and connections are correctly routed, arranging switchboards, control units and circuit boards. It may also involve field wiring and the connection of equipment and systems to the mains power supply.
On a day-to-day basis you will be responsible for minimising production downtime by using diagnostic equipment to identify and repair any faults promptly. Common tasks include routine planned and reactive maintenance, installing cable ducts and components, wiring up electrical sockets, terminals and switches as per the wiring diagrams and conducting functional tests on installations to check they work correctly.
Main duties and responsibilities
Skills, experience and qualifications required
You’ll have City & Guilds Level 3 (or recognised equivalent qualification), City & Guilds 2382 (18th edition), NVQ in Electro technical Services & AM2 Certification. In addition, you’ll need:
Whisky is one of the most energy-intensive products in the food and drink production sector. It uses seven times more energy than gin to make.
The industry has made progress towards cutting its carbon footprint. By 2018, over 20% of the industry’s energy use came from non-fossil fuels, compared to under 3% in 2008, and is committed to being net-zero by 2050.
Institute of Brewing and Distilling
Tel: 020 7499 8144
Website: http://www.ibd.org.uk
Twitter: @IBDHQ
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/IBDHQ
National Skills Academy for Food and Drink
Tel: 0330 174 1253
E-mail: info@nsafd.co.uk
Website: http://nsafd.co.uk
Twitter: @NSAFD
Scotland Food and Drink
Tel: 0131 335 0940
Website: http://www.foodanddrink.scot
Twitter: @scotfooddrink
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/scotfooddrink