"background": "Process-control systems are critical for industrial and infrastructure operations, yet their long-term reliability in challenging environments is under-researched. There is a paucity of longitudinal, quantitative studies on the performance degradation of such systems in East Africa, limiting evidence-based maintenance and design improvements. ", "purpose and objectives": "This case study aims to methodologically evaluate the reliability of industrial process-control systems and to develop a robust panel-data model for estimating failure rates and key influencing factors over an extended operational period. ", "methodology": "The study employs a longitudinal case-study design, analysing operational performance data from multiple, geographically dispersed systems. Reliability is modelled using a generalised linear mixed model for panel data. The core statistical model is = \ (\0 + \1 X{1, it + \ +), where is the failure rate for system i at time t, X1, it denotes time-varying covariates (e. g. , environmental stress), and \ᵢ represents system-specific random effects. Inference is based on robust standard errors clustered at the system level. ", "findings": "The analysis identifies a significant positive association between seasonal humidity extremes and system failure rates. A one standard deviation increase in humidity exposure was associated with a 15% increase in the expected monthly failure rate (95% CI: 9% to 21%). Electrical component degradation emerged as the predominant failure mode, accounting for over 60% of recorded incidents. ", "conclusion": "The methodological approach provides a validated framework for quantifying process-control system reliability. Findings confirm that environmental factors are a primary driver of performance degradation in the studied context, with electrical subsystems being particularly vulnerable. ", "recommendations": "Design specifications for new installations should mandate enhanced protection for electrical components against humidity. For asset management, we recommend implementing predictive maintenance schedules informed by panel-data reliability forecasts that incorporate local environmental data. ", "
Mwangi et al. (Thu,) studied this question.