Support each engineering discipline along the asset lifecycle
Complexity is growing in the energy and utilities industry. Within businesses, this is creating data silos and misaligned objectives while reducing collaboration and communication. As a result, most major capital and operational projects are over budget and behind schedule.
Join our November 3 webinar to learn how adopting a systems engineering approach improves connectivity between requirements and data within your asset lifecycle. This creates a single unified digital twin of your entire enterprise. Hear how systems engineering improves process efficiency, drives collaboration and enables data-driven decision-making. Start your businesses’ digital transformation with Siemens on November 3.
Apply a systems model architecture to achieve operational excellence
Poorly-integrated legacy software and subsystems extend project lifecycles, slow project development and reduce business efficiency. With systems engineering, your software systems are designed to seamlessly deliver project and contract requirements using higher quality data. Business information systems are now integrated into a central digital backbone, and important data becomes easy to find.
With a systems model architecture in place, data changes for a specific area become immediately known to all interested stakeholders. This improves communication and collaboration, eliminates silos and helps your business react faster to unforeseen circumstances.
Fully traceable digital platform supporting global energy teams
Despite years of effort attempting to integrate project teams and promote collaboration, connectivity and awareness across teams still needs to improve.
With a systems engineering approach, everyone connected to a project knows what is going on. Changes are now tracked, and project teams are supported by optimized systems. Through cross-domain communication and collaboration, energy and utilities businesses can create improved configurations and solve engineering problems faster. Knowledge workers executing a capital project or maintaining complex assets can better respond to challenging situations.
Minimize project impacts from personnel changes
Many experienced energy and utilities workers are nearing retirement, potentially taking with them priceless information about your business. Because systems engineering provides an integrated and traceable environment, a digital record remains, and important workers’ experience and knowledge carry forward.
Regardless of why personnel changes, new recruits can become proficient faster while making data-driven decisions using the latest digital solutions. This minimizes the effects of personnel changes so that progress is less impacted.
Ponentes:
John Nixon:Sr. Director, Siemens Digital Industries Software (DISW), Siemens
John is the Energy & Utilities global strategy lead for Siemens DISW. John has worked in energy and utilities for 28+ years. John created multiple energy and technology start-ups leading business development in China, Romania, Panama and the USA. John as also led large greenfield and brownfield projects with oil and mining supermajors in Canada and China, and spearheaded pipeline asset integrity programs in USA and Mexico. In addition to this, John holds patents for pipe lining technology and has been a board member for multiple technology firms and university R&D associations. John was an officer in the US Army and holds a BS in Civil Engineering from Texas A&M University.
Ed Leggott:Presales Solution Consultant, Energy & Utilities (DISW), Siemens
Ed Leggott is a Systems Engineer with over 10 years industry experience from both Oil & Gas and Aerospace. Ed has held multiple project, engineering management and digital initiative responsibilities before joining Siemens in 2019 with the US Presales team. Today Ed supports multiple accounts in the Energy sector as a trusted advisor to help business teams understand bigger picture concepts and digital maturity as they embark on their digitalization journey.
John Lusty:Global Industry Marketing Lead, Energy & Utilities (DISW), Siemens
John Lusty is the Energy & Utilities industry marketing lead for Siemens DISW. He began his career with Dow Chemical and later Nalco Chemical in technical sales as a steam and cooling water chemistry specialist in energy and chemical plants. In 2000, John moved to the software industry, holding management positions at Allegro Development and Bentley Systems. In 2010, John joined Siemens with roles in Enterprise Sales, Industry Solutions, and now Global Industry Marketing. John holds a Bachelor of Science in Earth Science from the University of Guelph.