Decoupling software from hardware for future-proofed process automation
This article has been supplied.
By: Kobus Vermeulen - Direct Sales Executive, Process Automation at Schneider Electric
For decades, industrial automation was built around a simple principle: install robust control hardware, keep it running for as long as possible, and minimise change. And whilst this approach worked well in the past, it has now at odds with the demands of modern industry.
The reality is, infrastructure is aging right before our eyes. At the same time businesses are expected to do so much more with automation hardware that was designed for different era of operations.
Granted, in many these legacy systems continue to perform admirably; the dilemma is systems like PLCs, DCS (distributed control systems), SCADA and field devices were designed for deterministic, long‑term operations.
Also, increasing data demands are exposing the limits of older architectures, as modern industrial initiatives now rely on high‑resolution sensor streams, historical operational records, and real‑time contextual inputs to deliver true enterprise‑level visibility.
Lastly, the gap continues to widen as digital technologies accelerate, from cloud‑native platforms and edge computing to AI‑driven optimisation, digital twins, and open, software‑defined architectures, compounding the pressure on legacy systems.
Conscious decoupling
The above clearly demonstrates that as modern digital technology continues, the hardware and software mismatch will become even bigger, creating growing operational and financial risks.
And traditional rip-and-replace strategies won’t cut it; it impractical and downright expensive. Organisations simply can’t stop operations to upgrade technology, there is just too much at stake, be it commissioning risks or regulatory requirement, they simply can’t afford it.
The solution is therefore to decouple software from hardware. By separating software innovation from physical control infrastructure, companies can modernise how they operate without disrupting how their plants run.
Decoupling also means that stable control systems can continue performing its real-time functions, while software layers evolve independently to support analytics, optimisation, visualisation and enterprise integration.
The result is that innovation no longer has to be tied to hardware replacement cycles. A software-centric approach also helps reduce one of the most significant risks facing industrial organisations today:
- Lifecycle misalignment risk: tight coupling forces premature upgrades or reliance on outdated systems.
- Decoupled architecture advantage: software can be standardised, patched, and modernised independently of hardware.
- Operational continuity: updates occur without downtime, preserving productivity.
- Asset value extension: infrastructure investments deliver longer returns by avoiding forced obsolescence.
Benefits abound
The decoupled software-centric automation plays a critical role in improving uptime, cybersecurity and maintenance efficiency.
Schneider Electric’s EcoStruxure Automation Expert software architecture, for example, delivers advanced diagnostics and faster fault recovery, making it possible to identify and resolve performance issues before they escalate into failures.
Furthermore, software allows condition-based maintenance strategies replace reactive interventions, thus helping maintenance teams focus resources where they are needed most.
Cybersecurity is another driver, many legacy operational technology environments were never designed to be connected to enterprise networks, cloud platforms or remote support systems.
Therefore, by introducing secure software and edge layers around existing infrastructure, organisations can improve monitoring and implement modern access controls without introducing unnecessary risk to critical control systems.
Perhaps most importantly, decoupling software from hardware allows companies to modernise at their own pace. Rather than waiting for equipment failures or major shutdowns, they can prioritise upgrades based on business value, operational risk and organisational readiness.
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