Key takeaways
Short answer: SCADA is the control layer: live monitoring and control of machines and processes. MES is the manufacturing operations layer above it: dispatching production orders, tracking what was made, genealogy, and performance like OEE. SCADA asks "is the process in control?"; MES asks "are we executing the plan well?" They integrate rather than compete. See also manufacturing execution system vs erp shop floor.
SCADA feeds MES the live signals; MES gives those signals business context — which order, which product, how it performed. SCADA without MES is blind to the plan; MES without SCADA has no real-time data.
OEE is an MES-layer metric built on SCADA-layer data. The machine signals come from control; the loss classification and order context come from execution management.
Trying to run production management in SCADA, or expecting MES to do real-time control. Each is poor at the other’s job; integrate them instead.
See how Fabrico captures this automatically on your lines — explore OEE for manufacturing or book a demo.
Yes — MES is the operations layer above the control layer.
Live OEE partly; full OEE needs MES-layer context.
Yes — SCADA feeds data up to MES.
Above MES, for planning and transactions.