Perez Technology Revolutions II
In the first part of our review of Professor Carlota Perez' "Technological revolutions and techno-economic paradigms" we learned many things about the economic situation we are currently in and how the "Sustainable Global Knowledge Society Boom" will affect us. Specifically how the energy industry has employed the process of innovation in "techno-economic paradigms" and how this could be accelerated using the Information & Communication Technology Revolution (ICTR) as suggested in the Resource Marketplace Module.
Note; as I write this second part, of this second document of Professor Carlota Perez, for just this year. Strategy + Business have published a new article of Professor Perez. It can be accessed here. [There is Exhibit 1 that is included in the document that has a "We are here" point on the "time" axis.] And Professor Carliss Baldwin just released a paper entitled "The Mirroring Hypothesis: Theory, Evidence and Exceptions". It is available here, and both papers will be reviewed on innovation in oil and gas as soon as possible.
5. Technological revolutions and techno-economic paradigms
In this second part of our review of Professor Perez' paper. We learn that her research is based on the impact of technology over the last 300 years.
It is possible to identify five such systems of systems since the initial ‘Industrial Revolution’ in England. Each can be seen as inaugurated by an important technological breakthrough acting as the big-bang that opens a new universe of opportunity for profitable innovation. Such was the case of the Intel microprocessor, or computer on a chip, initiating the information revolution. p. 189For the purposes of our review of this paper the Internet is the technology that makes the ICTR robust for what Perez calls the "deployment" phase. In Part I of this paper we noted Professor Ludwig von Mises' comments that the Industrial Revolution was the solution to the problems facing society.
What distinguishes a technological revolution from a random collection of technology systems and justifies conceptualizing it as a revolution are two basic features.
and
- The strong interconnectedness and interdependence of the participating systems in their technologies and markets.
- The capacity to transform profoundly the rest of the economy (and eventually society). p. 189
The capacity to transform other industries and activities results from the influence of its associated techno-economic paradigm, a best practice model for the most effective ways of using the new technologies within and beyond the new industries. While the new sectors expand to become the engines of growth for a long period, the techno-economic paradigm that results from their use guides a vast reorganisation and a widespread rise in productivity across pre-existing industries. p. 189Demands for energy by everyone is escalating. Energy is oxygen to an economy. Any lack of energy to one country or another could have significant negative effects to their economic possibilities. We have seen through the research in this blog that the equivalent man hours of work contained within one barrel of oil totals 18,000 hours. Denial of energy seems to be unfair and unreasonable to those who have to go without. Energy at any price appears to be the deal of this century, and it is. Oil and gas is the business that we are in.
It therefore seems unreasonable to be constrained by energy. The bureaucracy has brought us to this level, and we have prospered, now we need to move faster and more innovatively. Using the ICTR to enable greater deliver-ability of oil and gas is what is possible.
Thus, a technological revolution can be seen more generally as a major upheaval of the wealth-creating potential of the economy, opening a vast innovation opportunity space and providing a new set of associated generic technologies, infrastructures and organisational principles that can significantly increase the efficiency and effectiveness of all industries and activities. p. 190People, Ideas & Things as Professor Paul Romer has stated similar points in his Reason Magazine interview.
6. The structure of technological revolutions
Oil and gas involves science. Earth sciences and engineering disciplines are the source of where the value is created and held in the industry. Innovations are based on the sciences and in turn fuel scientific discovery, just as discoveries lead to future innovations. How can this value generating process accelerate?
It is at this point, when the argument of the secretive ways of how the bureaucracy deals with ideas is noted to be decidedly counter productive. The process of hiding ideas has the negative effect of not identifying whom is responsible, and hence the reduction of monetary benefits to the discoverer.
If you believe that the next great innovation in oil and gas is going to pop out of some one's office, you might be waiting for a long time. The pursuit of ideas is hard and risky work. If an engineer thinks that he can provide the industry with a 2% gain in productivity by using his new idea, then he / she should be entitled to earn the rights too that idea as reward for the difficult, difficult work.
In the current bureaucracy "knowledge" is held by no one. If someone comes up with a good idea in new drilling technology; then the bureaucracy will sponsor three drilling companies to implement it. Great if your one of the three drilling companies, not so good if your the individual who thought of the idea and were not rewarded. That is the old way of doing business.
The Research & Capabilities Module replaces these secretive ways of the energy industry from a science and engineering perspective. To a proposed method in which the discoveries populate the Module immediately upon discovery. This does two things. First the individual is recognized with the discovery and earns the rights to his / her intellectual property. Secondly these innovations are known within the industry on which others can build upon.
Energy producers should be concerned with their two competitive advantages. One their land and physical asset base. Two, the capabilities they have within the earth science and engineering disciplines. If someone down the road just came up with an innovative way to engineer greater production, then hire them or their consulting firm to work on your assets and augment your capabilities.
We'll stand here at this point with no further development in the sciences and engineering of oil and gas until such time as those who spend the time, effort, money and energy to develop a new idea are recognized and appreciated by the oil and gas producers. If you think a budget-driven bureaucrat will be the one who breaks the next big idea, keep dreaming. Perez has the following to say.
The interconnection of the technologies of a revolution takes place at several levels.
To reiterate the oil and gas industry will be the prime benefactor by eliminating this blind dark ether of where all good ideas disappear into. Oil and gas companies must become the consumers of ideas, not the destroyers.
- They stem from the same areas of knowledge in science and technology and use similar engineering principles.
- They require similar skills for their design and operation—quite often new ones.
- They stimulate the upstream development of a common network of suppliers of inputs and services as well as interdependent distribution outlets.
- Their dynamism is mutually driven through very strong inter-linkages, often being the main market for each other (the more growth and innovation there is in computers, the more growth and innovation there will be in semiconductors and vice versa).
- Their diffusion generates coherent patterns of consumption and use so that the learning in one system facilitates the learning in the next and the installation of conditions for the use of one set of products becomes an externality for the next (once electricity comes to the home for lighting and refrigeration, it facilitates the adoption of radios and vacuum cleaners). p. 191
If your an enlightened producer, an oil and gas investor or shareholder, who would be interested in funding these software developments and communities, please follow our Funding Policies & Procedures and our Hardware Policies & Procedures. If your a government that collects royalties from oil and gas producers, and are concerned about the accuracy of your royalty income, please review our Royalty Policies & Procedures and email me. And if your a potential user of this software, and possibly as a member of the Community of Independent Service Providers, please join us here.
Technorati Tags: People's Perez Innovation Change Management Research