为最坏的情况做准备,实现最好的结果:石油和天然气工业物联网灾难响应的经验教训

Thomas P. Ventulett, Leigh M. Villegas
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引用次数: 2

摘要

随着越来越多的石油和天然气公司制定物联网(IoT)战略,并开始向工业4.0或智能制造进行数字化转型,由于世界上一些最大和最关键的行业(石油和天然气、化工、制药、能源等)存在高度可燃环境的监管限制,他们在采用技术方面面临挑战。在世界范围内的1区危险区域,高达15%的人员不能使用移动计算设备,除非这些设备被认证为“本质安全”,或者不能引起可能点燃易燃环境的火花。因此,在危险区域操作中的人类“传感器”,可以想象到在这些操作的维护、工作流程、过程或功能中察觉到的异常或问题,被降级为用铅笔和纸记录观察结果,然后在几小时或几天后手动将数据输入ERP系统。缺乏实时通信和数据管理导致效率低下,成本增加,安全和资产风险增加,在极端情况下可能导致停机甚至生命损失。通过部署新的物联网技术,允许人们在1区危险区域内使用技术,人类可以积极地与机器实时交互,从而大大提高危险操作的生产率、安全性和底线。一种专门为石油和天然气危险区域作业而构建的新型物联网平台,将需要包括各种价格合理的传感器,以覆盖广阔的空间、实时通信、云计算、机器学习、权限管理、安全、大数据存储、分析和用户友好的可视化,所有这些都能在高度爆炸性的条件下运行。本文基于AegexTechnologies、Verizon、诺基亚和多个技术合作伙伴进行的实际研究,考虑了危险场所物联网平台在生产力和安全性方面的优势,这些研究在两次年度活动(2017年融合响应操作(#OCR2017)和2018年融合响应操作(#OCR2018 -将于2018年11月5日至8日举行)期间,在现实灾难场景中与第一响应者一起测试了各种边缘技术。这些事件为在极端条件下与真人一起测试物联网提供了无与伦比的机会,例如由地震引起的分阶段炼油厂倒塌。#OCR2017和#OCR2018展示了如何通过本质安全平板电脑和物联网传感器等尖端技术实现实时通信和数据管理,从战略上帮助急救人员更好地处理紧急情况。研究结果深入了解了物联网功能持续合作的必要性,不仅可以更好地管理应急响应,还可以更好地管理石油和天然气等危险行业的日常运营。为油气设施配备无处不在的智能物联网数据传感能力,为油气人员配备实时通信和数据管理工具,可以显著提高生产力、安全性、应急响应和减灾能力。
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Enabling the Best by Preparing for the Worst: Lessons from Disaster Response for Industrial IoT in Oil and Gas
As more oil and gas companies develop Internet of Things (IoT) strategies and beginning their digital transformation to Industry 4.0 or Smart Manufacturing, they face challenges in adopting technologies due to regulatory restrictions for highly combustible atmospheres such as exist in some of the world's largest and most critical industries - oil & gas, chemical, pharmaceutical, energy and others. In Zone 1 classified hazardous areas worldwide, up to 15% of personnel do not have access to mobile computing devices unless they are certified "intrinsically safe," or incapable of causing a spark that could ignite a combustible environment. Thus, the human "sensor" in hazardous area operations, who could conceivably detect perceived anomalies or problems in the maintenance, workflow, process or function of these operations, is relegated to recording observations with pencil and paper and then entering data manually into ERP systems hours or days later. Such lack of real-time communication and data management results in inefficiency, increased costs and elevated safety and asset risk, causing potential down-time and even loss of life in extreme cases. By deploying new IoT technologies that allow people to use technology inside Zone 1 hazardous areas, humans can actively interact with machines in real time to dramatically improve productivity, safety and the bottom line in hazardous operations. A new style of IoT platform built especially for oil & gas hazardous area operations, would need to include various and affordable types of sensors to cover vast spaces, real-time communications, cloud computing, machine learning, rights management, security, big data storage, analytics and user-friendly visualization, all functioning in highly explosive conditions. This paper considers the advantages for productivity and safety of an IoT Platform for Hazardous Locations, based on hands-on research conducted by AegexTechnologies, Verizon, Nokia and multiple technology partners that tested various edge technologies with first responders in realistic disaster scenarios during two annual events, Operation Convergent Response 2017 (#OCR2017) and Operation Convergent Response 2018 (#OCR2018 – to take place 5-8 November 2018)). The events provide unparalleled opportunities to test IoTunder extreme conditions with real people, such as a staged refinery collapse caused by an earthquake. #OCR2017 and #OCR2018 showed how enabling real-time communications and data management via cutting-edge technologies, such as intrinsically safe tablets and IoT sensors, can strategically assist first responders to better handle emergencies. The studies’ results give insight into the need for continued collaboration on IoT capabilities that can better manage not only emergency response, but everyday operations in hazardous industries such as oil and gas. Equipping oil and gas facilities with pervasive, smart IoT data-sensing capabilities, and equipping oil and gas personnel with real-time communications and data management tools, could result in dramatic improvements in productivity, safety, emergency response and disaster mitigation.
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