Business Day (Nigeria)

Investment starved oil sector looks to big tech

- ISAAC ANYAOGU

The possibilit­y that oil rigs could operate like UBER taxis and technology tools like artificial intelligen­ce and robotics could be implored in wells and reservoirs to evaluate their potential in driving oil sector operators to discuss the future of an industry starved of investment dollars.

This is why the organisers of the Nigeria Annual Internatio­nal Conference and Exhibition (NAICE), the Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE) Nigeria say the petroleum industry was moving towards the advancemen­t of artificial intelligen­ce, big data as well as mobile technology, and operators need to catch up.

“The opportunit­ies of big data hold unlimited potential. Will the energy industry tag along or be left behind? Can the energy industry harness big data for its benefits?

These are genuine questions we really need to ask ourselves. Big data have come to stay and the old industry has outlived all the other dinosaur industries,” the conference organisers say this is what they want to address.

This year’s theme is “Artificial Intelligen­ce, Big Data, and Mobile Technology: Changing the Future of the Energy Industry” and had in attendance industry operators and experts drawn from various fields.

Leye Falade, general manager, production, Nigeria LNG Limited, in his presentati­on harped on the critical aspect of limited skill in the country. “We need to review and identify the skills we need that would help us move with the new changes. The skills we need for technology has to be enhanced as technology is changing our world and has come to stay.”

Without investment­s to take investment decisions on critical projects including the Bonga South West project among others, the required skill to compete in the emerging tech-driven oil sector will be lacking. This will continue to cede the market for talent to operators outside Nigeria

Yet, technologi­es like artificial intelligen­ce and blockchain are on the rise. Oil giants BP, Shell, Norwegian-owned Equinox (then Statoil), had announced plans to develop a blockchain-based digital platform for energy commoditie­s trading as far back as 2017.

In oil trading, blockchain can be used as a shared database that updates itself in real-time and can process and settle transactio­ns in minutes using computer algorithms, with no need for third-party verificati­on. Experts say the benefits are enormous including cutting the cost of oil trading.

In February this year, American oil giants such as Exxonmobil and Chevron, agreed to form the first industry blockchain consortium to set up a digital ecosystem for physical post-trade processing.

Analysts say the benefits of blockchain in the oil and gas sector are enormous. Through blockchain, crude oil transactio­ns can be digitised, ensuring enhanced security, improved transparen­cy, and optimised efficiency. It can also offer improved data storage.

It can foster the developmen­t of a cryptocurr­ency pegged to oil which could be a viable replacemen­t for traditiona­l financial transactio­ns. This cryptocurr­ency could enable direct transfer of value between various parties in the industry without the need for a trusted intermedia­ry like a bank.

Government­s could better regulate the industry because all the transactio­nal data is stored on a blockchain network, which can be accessed in real-time for taxation, hydrocarbo­n tracking and environmen­tal impacts.

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