McKinsey Internet of Things
We have another McKinsey document that provides a keen insight on how the Information & Communication Technology Revolution will affect everyone. This paper entitled "The Internet of Things" is very much on topic. I highly recommend reviewing it.
Of particular interest is the fact that this article dove tails with the People, Ideas & Objects Technical Vision. Recall this vision suggests that since the oil and gas industry is comprised of sciences around heat and pressure, the use of sensors to monitor and control elements of the production cycle is possible. This monitoring and control would help in making the industry more productive and enhance the business decisions made, if, firms were able to deal with the volumes of data.
The four cornerstones of the Technical Vision are as follows.
- IPv6 - Providing unlimited addressing for those sensors to be accessed and controlled.
- Java - Strong Static Typing providing assurance that the sensor your controlling is really the one that you want, and not a mistake.
- Wireless - Ubiquitous networks anywhere, anytime.
- Asynchronous Process Management - The ability to deal with data and information in a more controlled fashion.
A couple of interesting points that McKinsey suggest the "Internet of Things" could provide are as follows.
Automation and control
Making data the basis for automation and control means converting the data and analysis collected through the Internet of Things into instructions that feed back through the network to actuators that in turn modify processes. Closing the loop from data to automated applications can raise productivity, as systems that adjust automatically to complex situations make many human interventions unnecessary. Early adopters are ushering in relatively basic applications that provide a fairly immediate payoff. Advanced automated systems will be adopted by organizations as these technologies develop further.The impact within oil and gas could be much higher productivity and greater value. The scenario that I have detailed on this blog is that of a pricing model that provides the producer with price-maker characteristics. The scenario has the Joint Operating Committee deciding that their production costs of $50 / barrel require that production begin to be scaled back 25% at $80, 50% at $70, 75% at $60 and shut-in at $50.00. The input being the market price would drive control systems to shut the well down to the correct level of production. Otherwise producers may find they continue to produce at a loss and the price drops to $25.00. This being a predetermined and agreed to threshold where the operational decision making authority resides - The Joint Operating Committee - and as a result can be operated in an automated fashion.
Software to aggregate and analyze data, as well as graphic display techniques, must improve to the point where huge volumes of data can be absorbed by human decision makers or synthesized to guide automated systems more appropriately.McKinsey go on to suggest that these types of systems will require new organizational models be adopted by firms.
Within companies, big changes in information patterns will have implications for organizational structures, as well as for the way decisions are made, operations are managed, and processes are conceived. Product development, for example, will need to reflect far greater possibilities for capturing and analyzing information.And a dedicated software development capability, like that which is discussed here at People, Ideas & Objects.
Companies can begin taking steps now to position themselves for these changes by using the new technologies to optimize business processes in which traditional approaches have not brought satisfactory returns. Energy consumption efficiency and process optimization are good early targets. Experiments with the emerging technologies should be conducted in development labs and in small-scale pilot trials, and established companies can seek partnerships with innovative technology suppliers creating Internet-of-Things capabilities for target industries.March 31, 2010 is the deadline for raising our 2010 operating budget. After which a variety of consequences, such as financial penalties and a loss of one years time will occur. Our appeal should be based on the 21 compelling reasons of how better the oil and gas industry and its operations could be handled. They may not be the right way to go, but we are committed to working with the various communities to discover and ensure the right ones are.
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