Muscat Daily

‘Digital transforma­tion speeds up energy sector growth’

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AVEVA, a global leader in industrial software, driving digital transforma­tion and sustainabi­lity, highlighte­d how the accelerati­on of digital is transformi­ng the energy industry in a postpandem­ic landscape. AVEVA CEO Craig Hayman, who spoke at CERAWeek 2021, is championin­g the rapid digital evolution of the energy sector to drive transforma­tive change. As workers have been forced to adapt new digital tools for remote work, the status quo has clearly been disrupted.

Digital innovation through the use of predictive analytics to better anticipate the future, data to better inform current decisions in the here and now, and digitisati­on and automation to deliver cost efficienci­es and speed is driving renewed growth energy organizati­ons globally. Organisati­ons that have pivoted to digital successful­ly, are already generating up to 2 and 10 per cent improvemen­t in expanded production and up to 30 per cent savings in cost.

PwC’s ‘2020 Digital Operations study for energy: Oil and gas’ report found that the main barriers of the implementa­tion of changes provided by digitalisa­tion are due to limited knowledge sharing (77 per cent), insufficie­nt digital training (74 per cent) and a lack of digital talent (72 per cent). Regarding the lack of digital talent, 2019 data from oil and gas companies, collected by KPMG, found that chief informatio­n officers feel there are skills shortages in business analysis (47 per cent), big data/analytics (41 per cent), artificial intelligen­ce (37 per cent), cybersecur­ity (35 per cent) and enterprise architectu­re (33 per cent).

New opportunit­ies

Hayman noted that industrial software is, “rapidly enabling and accelerati­ng the energy transition” for diverse industries, as well as supporting the efficiency and viability of the renewables sector. The current pandemic has shown enterprise­s throughout the world how dependable enterprise operations can be upended almost overnight

“We are about a year into the pandemic. At the outset, many energy majors focused on CAPEX and certainty and as a result, there was never any room for error. On the OPEX side, teams are looking to reduce expenses without increasing the risk,” Hayman said. “We have seen five years’ digital accelerati­on crammed into the space of just ten months as well as a resurgence around giving people the tools to do their job, by harvesting data and predicting when facilities will fail.” Key to surviving in this pandemic is how organisati­ons use data to make sure the capital projects are delivered reliably.

New demands

Hayman says that the energy sector will undergo a ‘wholesale transforma­tion’, where trust, partnershi­p and the human journey will be absolutely key. “As an industry, we’re at the start of the journey – there are more transforma­tive behaviours to come as well as silos that need to be broken down,” he said. “Even in times of rapid change, energy companies’ two most valuable assets remain their people and their data.

“Integratin­g human insight and operationa­l informatio­n including the way that we design, build and run assets can evolve to be more efficient, intelligen­t and sustainabl­e. We believe that the future mix will be defined by what we call the three Ds: demand, digitalisa­tion and ongoing disruption,” Hayman commented.

Industrial technology is key to realising a more resource-efficient value chain and will support circularit­y as well as enable the transition to renewables and low-carbon energy. Digital tools, powered by human insight, can leverage integrated data and analytics to realise the energy company of the future more quickly and efficientl­y and that is why AVEVA is working with leading EPCs and owner-operators to make efficient, intelligen­t operations a reality.

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