Gulf Times - Gulf Times Business

Mideast oil producers turn to new digital toolbox for extensive cost savings

- By Gareth Kirkwood Gareth Kirkwood is managing director for Middle East and India, Lloyd’s Register.

As the world’s biggest oil companies, including the UAE’s ADNOC and Saudi Aramco, ramp up investment­s in new production capacity amid $75 oil prices, they are eagerly eyeing new digital tools that could deliver millions of dollars in savings. Enter predictive analytics – the closest an industry beset by uncertaint­y and technical complexity can get to a crystal ball.

Already, more than half (57) of the world’s 100 largest oil and gas firms – several in the Middle East – are already using or have plans to use predictive analytics, according to LR’s latest Technology Radar Special Report, titled ‘Predictive Analytics in Oil and Gas: The future in focus’, which will be launched next week in Abdu Dhabi on the eve of ADIPEC 2018.

One tool alone, Machine Learning and predicting failures has, for example, been found to generate savings of many hundreds of thousands of dollars per drill rig and multiple millions on gas pipelines in the eastern US. Giving predictive analytics a cold shoulder would be a costly mistake for Middle Eastern oil, especially when you consider there are 160 offshore rigs alone operating across the Gulf.

This advanced form of analytics expands on the digital journey establishe­d by artificial intelligen­ce (AI), big data and others. It promotes visibility – the bedrock of reliabilit­y and efficiency in global energy security. How to glimpse into the future

– i.e. leveraging predictive analytics – will be at the top of the digital agenda of boardroom conversati­ons in the Middle East in 2019.

Sweet spots abound. Within the top 100 companies, evidence of predictive adoption is most extensive upstream, in oil-field equipment and services, exploratio­n and production.

The largest firms, mainly integrated oil and gas companies appear to have advanced furthest. Midstream and downstream can also significan­tly benefit in the Middle East, especially since the region took the aged refining reins from Europe to establish one of the world’s most sophistica­ted and flexible hubs.

Imagine the enormous impact on Profit & Loss accounts, Balance Sheets and competitiv­ity, if predictive analytics can be properly applied to the large number of ageing refineries around the region and to the raft of new facilities being planned and soon to come on line. This has durable value, as the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) expects the region to have the world’s biggest growth in refining capacity up to 2023.

Over the next five years, this cuttingedg­e digital tool can bolster production while streamlini­ng costs and cutting risks. That’s a very good deal for those willing to grab the opportunit­y.

Digging for diamonds

‘Data diamonds’ are key to unlocking the most valuable insights via predictive analytics. The global data sphere will grow to 163 zettabytes (ZB) by 2025, which is 1tn gigabytes and a staggering ten times the 16.1ZB of data generated in 2016, according to the Internatio­nal Data Corp (IDC).

As data volumes surge, tools like predictive analytics will enable companies to focus on the quality of informatio­n rather than an overload. Quality over quantity will prevail! The more data intelligen­tly gathered, the more it is analysed, the more lessons are learned, and the more efficienci­es and visibility will be achieved.

This intelligen­ce will be a much-needed release valve in what is an increasing­ly intense pressure cooker in the Middle East and beyond. Energy stakeholde­rs face tall orders on every front. Energy consumptio­n in the Middle East alone is expected to rise by 54% up to 2040, according to BP Outlook, while the near-30% gain that the UN expects in the global population by 2050 is also echoed in most Gulf countries.

Demanding environmen­tal regulation­s spawned by the Paris Agreement and cross border geopolitic­al tensions that hinder collaborat­ions are also ramping up the ante. The pressure cooker cannot afford to blow. Smart and swift solutions that maximise the clout of the digital revolution are the safest answer in an industry renowned for its myriad of unknowns.

The Opec+ agreement (the deal between Opec and non-Opec members to curtail output), the US’ sanctions on Iran, trade wars and environmen­tal regulation­s like the Internatio­nal Maritime Organisati­on’s (IMO) sulphur cap of 0.5% on bunker fuel from 2020 are all potential triggers for volatility in the Middle East’s oil market.

The multi-billion dollar savings identified in LR’s Technology Radar special report have the power to help stabilise Middle Eastern oil stakeholde­rs’ balance sheets and spur much-needed research and developmen­t (R&D) to commercial­ise digital innovation­s. The latter is especially relevant to many Gulf nations’ Visions to become knowledge-based economies; the UAE included.

Primary players from energy companies, technology firms and government to academia and financial institutio­ns (FI) must lower the brick walls that crimp the flow of knowledge sharing. This is not new territory for Middle Eastern oil stakeholde­rs; their track record since the sharp decline in oil prices in 2014 for sharing knowledge and embracing digital disruption stands them in good stead.

Predicativ­e analytics are essentiall­y a highly intelligen­t heads up that enables proactive action to be taken affordably and efficientl­y, saving millions of dollars and potentiall­y even lives. While Middle Eastern oil stakeholde­rs’ digital tools have been shedding light on the dark corners of operationa­l inefficien­cy for years, predictive analytics gives them a very powerful spotlight to see every detail. They must be patient and persevere; the 20/20 vision will be worth it.

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