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[Project] Thailand - Consumer Goods Manufacturing Zone Integration

Bossza007

I am From Thailand
GA Member
May 4, 2021
3,475
TYPEInfrastructure
CLIENTThailand
PROJECTConsumer Goods Manufacturing Zone Integration
PROJECT COST750,000,000.00
COMPLETION DATE01/09/2025
PROJECT INFORMATIONConsumer Goods Manufacturing Zone Integration
Project Title: Consumer Goods Manufacturing Zone Integration
Project Code: TH-AMCU-001
Date of Approval: 15 September 2006
Version: 1.0

Approval and Endorsement Authorities
  • National Assembly of Thailand
    Approval Date: May 21, 2006
    Approval Margin: Supermajority (94%)
  • Community Assemblies
    Approval Date: June 7, 2006
    Approval Margin: 96% of Assemblies in Favor
  • Federation of Worker Council Unions of Thailand
    Approval Date: July 19, 2006
    Approval Margin: 100% Approval
  • Unions of Regional Consumer Councils
    Approval Date: August 26, 2006
    Approval Margin: 100% Approval
  • National Economic Planning Board
    Approval Date: September 12, 2005
    Approval Margin: Consensus Achieved (100%)

Project Overview
  • Project Lead: Ministry of Industry
  • Project Coordinator: Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit
  • Project Duration: 6 Months (September 2006 – March 2007)
  • Development Agency: National Economic Planning Board
  • Collaborating Bodies:
    • Local engineering, procurement, and construction cooperatives
    • Relevant Provincial Administrative Organizations
    • Local logistics cooperatives
    • Existing workers’ councils inside the Advanced Manufacturing Cluster
Funding and Resource Allocation
  • Total Budget: 24,637,500,000 Baht ($750 million)
  • Funding Sources:
    • National Budget Allocation: 40%
    • Provincial Budget Allocation: 30%
    • Regional Development Fund: 20%
    • Manufacturing Cooperative Export Revenue Tax: 10%
  • Resource Contributions:
    • Engineer and Construction: 60%
    • Architectural Design and Urban Planning: 20%%
    • Digital Systems and Technology Integration: 15%
    • Community Outreach and Training Program: 5%
Compliance and Ethical Oversight
  • Compliance Certifying Authority: National Ethical Oversight Board (NEOB)
  • Ethical Review Status: Approved (Unanimous)
  • Environmental Impact Assessment: Conducted by Environmental Conservation Council of Thailand
  • Public Transparency: All project documents available on the National Digital Archive
Citizen Participation
  • Citizen Feedback Sessions: 120 Sessions Nationwide
  • Digital Polling and Surveys: 8.6 Million Responses Collected
  • Public Forums and Debates: Conducted in Effected Provinces
Expected Impact and Outcome
  • Increased Productivity: Expected significant increase in consumer goods production from state-provided infrastructure, fostering cooperation with consumer goods cooperatives.
  • Increased Self-Sufficiency: Expected significant increase in consumer goods availability and reduced reliance on imports, progressing toward a post-scarcity economy through enhanced productive capacity.
  • Potential Revenue Source: Expected possible cooperation between the domestic manufacturing cooperative and the State Trading Cooperations to export their consumer goods, increasing the state tax revenue.
  • Increase Living Standard: Expect a moderate increase in the general living standard as the state-provided manufacturing infrastructure allows for automated, advanced, and more efficient consumer goods production.[/B]
Post-Implementation Review
  • Scheduled Review Date: March 15, 2008
  • Reviewing Authorities:
    • National Audit Office
    • Independent Citizen Review Committee (ICRC)
    • Institute for Open and Decentralized Governance
    • Participatory Democracy Research Institute
    • Regional Economic Impact Assessment Board
Since the 1998 revolution, the Socialist Republic of Thailand has been bolstering its manufacturing sector with the goal of self-sufficiency and mass availability of goods and services. The country has made several significant strides in increasing its productive capacity. However, most consumer goods originate from workers' cooperatives’ infrastructure, which the confederal and local governments occasionally subsidize. Regardless, the state-provided economic base already included additive manufacturing, industrial automation production facilities, and nanotechnology research and development centers. Confederal coordinators from the Democrat Party suggested the expansion of Advanced Manufacturing Clusters (AMC) to include consumer goods manufacturing zones as a logical conclusion.

An additional 50 acres will be dedicated to the new productive sections within each AMC. Production halls feature high-volume manufacturing lines, flexible manufacturing cells, assembly areas, packaging and kitting zones, and cleanroom facilities. Raw material warehouses include receiving docks, bulk storage, palletized storage, and temperature-controlled storage. Finished goods warehouses feature AS/RS, staging areas, and returned goods processing zones. Distribution hubs include loading docks, vehicle storage and parking, and on-site logistics offices. A product development lab is located in each zone. The project also installs comprehensive and advanced quality control and assurance labs.

The existing infrastructure of the larger AMCs would provide robotic cells alongside new automation control rooms for the consumer goods manufacturing zones. Utilities such as power substations, boiler and chiller plants, water treatment plants, compressed air systems, and HVAC systems are included. Maintaining and engineering workshops feature machine shops, electrical and PLC workshops, and spare part storage. The project also includes guardhouses, perimeter fencing, lighting, CCTV surveillance, and access control systems. All security measures and equipment are in line with NSST 1.5 Architecture.
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Odinson

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World Power
Jul 12, 2018
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