Oil IT Journal Volume 29 Number 5


‘Turmoil’ in the OSDU Forum

Google’s ECIM presentation proposes a ‘community implementation’ of the OSDU data standard to circumvent CSP-specific implementations which are a ‘barrier to progress’. Currently, OSDU maps ‘every data type in the world’ but comes with ‘no functionality’.

This article is approximately 364 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


ChatGPT as research assistant

PNAS publication compares GPT3.5 and 4. ‘Authoritative hallucinations’ may lead to an expanding misinformation ecosystem. But GPT-4 can help with recommendations on ‘ethical’ statistical protocols.

This article is approximately 360 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


OSDU - why no data egress?

Back from the 2024 ECIM data management conference, Oil IT Journal editor Neil McNaughton remains puzzled as to what OSDU is trying to achieve. While OSDU is developing paths for data ingestion to the cloud, data exit and use is conflicted. Whatever happened to the consumption zones? Why is there ‘turmoil in the Forum?’ He concludes by running OSDU against the DARPA/Heimler ‘catechism’ for project evaluation … with underwhelming results.

There is a popular, not to say tired, parable that speakers trot-out to embellish their talks, that of the blind men discovering an elephant. I propose to repurpose this tale in an attempt to describe OSDU, The Open Group’s Open subsurface data universe. In my retelling, there are no blind men (or women). All are sighted, intelligent and well-meaning. The only problem is. They are all inside the elephant.

In my (admittedly limited) interactions with the OSDU community, everyone has some knowledge of a piece of the puzzle, but when quizzed on related matters, like how and why, people back-off, deflate, to the extent even of admitting that I, a mere editor of a Journal, may know more about OSDU than they do! The OSDU crowd are all inside the beast, operating some more or less obscure bit of the machinery. But nobody knows the big picture. There is a good reason for this, there isn’t really a big picture at all. There are multiple vague objectives that shimmer and change with the telling.

Flashback to 2019 when I interviewed Johan Krebbers, the father of OSDU. I put it to him that the 2019 OSDU booklet ‘read like poetry’ and asked, ‘After 20 or 30 years of working on data issues, What’s new?’ He answered ‘the cloud’. So the big picture is something in the cloud, which is literally nebulous, ‘nebula’ being the Latin for cloud.

Speaking of cloud, a rain check. I went back to the OSDU Forum’s website where, stripping away the verbiage, we read that the objective is for a ‘common data platform architectural design under pinning how our industry works with its data’. This begs the question, is it a common data platform or a common platform design? The Forum’s top-level position continues that this platform is to ‘reduce costs, break down data silos, enable innovation and bring data together in one location’. Worthy aims indeed but how are they to be realized?

Digging deeper into the Forum we have some curious text announcing the ‘Quick Start Guides’ which ‘provide a way to rapidly start using the system’. Well if they did not they wouldn’t be quick start guides would they - duh! The web page boldly announces that ‘the following User Guides are available to you’. But no, it is not guides plural for there is only one, the OSDU Operator Data Loading Quick Start Guide.

In the absence of a quick start guide to getting data out of OSDU, I have been digging around in earlier OSDU material. It seems like there was, early on in OSDU’s history a plan for data egress in the form of ‘consumption zones’ tuned to particular use cases. Only one significant consumption zone has seen the light of day so far, Esri’s geospatial CZ. Why is there not a multitude of ‘open source’ CZs in the labyrinthine OSDU Git repository? Why is there, as Chris Brockman opined at the 2024 ECIM data management conference, ‘Every data type in the world and no functionality’? The answer, is that data access is where the CSPs and other holders of the OSDU keys (think SLB) are to cash-in. Attempts to facilitate open data access, or to make OSDU open as in ‘free’, are causing the ‘turmoil’ in the Forum*.

While the CSPs, IOCs and major vendors others tussle over who does what, let’s return to the big picture. On the one hand, OSDU is emerging as a route for major data migration programs into the cloud. Anyone who has been involved in data transcription (for that is what it is) will know that such programs are extremely complex when done ‘at scale’. They can involve data loss as formats and operating systems may not align. Also such programs do not in themselves bring huge immediate benefits to an operator. They are more in the line of the ‘cost of doing business’ as repositories are decommissioned and new technology comes along. There is no reason to think that a transcription to an OSDU cloud will avoid these gotchas and costs.

The Heimler catechism was recently brought to my attention. This is the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency’s (DARPA) approach to evaluating a new project. I propose to run it across OSDU (as I see it).

Heimler: What are you trying to do? Articulate your objectives using absolutely no jargon.

OSDU: Err… move data to the cloud?

Heimler: How is it done today, and what are the limits of current practice?

OSDU: Quite a lot of data has been in the cloud since before the cloud was called the cloud.

Heimler: What is new in your approach and why do you think it will be successful?

OSDU: It is an open source attempt with support from many. This may or may not lead to ‘success’.

Heimler: Who cares? If you are successful, what difference will it make?

OSDU: Data that was not previously in the cloud will be in the cloud. This may not make much of a difference at all!

Heimler: What are the risks?

OSDU: The whole project gets bogged down in acrimony between competing protagonists.

Heimler: How much will it cost?

OSDU: No idea!

Heimler: How long will it take?

OSDU: Well it has been running for six years so far…

Heimler: What are the mid-term and final ‘exams’ to check for success?

OSDU: Err… pass…

* See this issue’s lead.


Book Review: Sustainable Oil and Gas using Blockchain

Saraji and Chen’s substantial work covers a lot of ground. Is blockchain the solution to a sustainable oil and gas industry? Can an ‘Oracle’ fix the problem of relating digital tokens to emissions?

This article is approximately 967 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


27th Annual ECIM data management conference – ‘The Data Strikes Back’

Human factors keynote. Microsoft Purview and Shell’s information governance. Vär Energi’s DIY data platform. Thoughtworks and the data mesh. Panel session on the data ‘trilemma’. UFRGS’s ontology-driven digital twin. Diskos 2.0. AWS on GenAI and agent-based workflows. Landmark/GeologiQ and the digital twin.

This article is approximately 1942 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


Regulatory

Shut-in wells, a ‘massive’ North Sea opportunity. Texas RRC’s new waste management rules. Foresight report on Future of UK Subsurface. NSTA’s decommissioning benchmarking report.

This article is approximately 219 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


North Sea data principles

Cascading quangos promote collaboration, data sharing to advance offshore energy transition.

This article is approximately 214 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


Software, hardware short takes

Aquaterra RAF repurposes old wells. Armexa ‘IRIS’. New Akselos SPM. Celonis process intelligence for oil and gas. Control Station system health monitor. Beicip EasyTrace 2024.1. SEG-Y QuickView from Troika. Imubit’s ‘Optimizing Brain’. AI Fault detection in Badley’s T7. Iveda VumastAR AI detects oil spills. Kitware interacts with billion point cloud dataset. Kurve exits stealth mode. Ovarro’s ‘cost-efficient’ T-Boxes. New AI Gateway in Eliis’ PaleoScan. ResInsight supports cloud services. SLB ‘Lumi’ LLMs for energy.

This article is approximately 736 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


Folks, facts, orgs…

This issue’s movers and shakers from :Black & Veatch, Consub, Cognite, Fluor, Foster Findlay Associates, Intelecy, MIT Climate and Sustainability Consortium, Open Geospatial Consortium, SEG, Society for Professional Data Managers, Velo3D, NIST and CloudZero.

This article is approximately 350 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


Done deals

Bentley hikes OGC investment. Innovex and Dril-Quip merge. EQT sells IFS stake. CGE merges with eVision. Energy Domain closes series A round. Pelican Energy Partners acquires GSE Solutions. Geospace divvies-up business. Kalibrate bags IMST Corp. Indicor acquires Ovarro. Petrofac’s ‘comprehensive financial restructure’. Promus/Kvanted back Samp. Seeq closed series D round. SCF Partners acquires Newpark Fluids Systems. ShipTracks buys Oceaneering unit. Siemens’ new ‘blockchain bond’. Weatherford acquires Datagration.

This article is approximately 503 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


TAC Insights’ SAP in Energy and Utilities 2024

Petronas SAP ‘Phoenix’ program. Enedis’ AI catches the meter cheaters. GoLive on Petrol Ofisi’s Oracle-to-HANA migration. VertiGIS syncs SAP and Esri. SAP: GenAI/Joule copilot is changing the game. SAP Oil & Gas Roadmap update. SAP knowledge graph engine ‘real soon now!’

This article is approximately 757 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


On AI ethics, governance and avoiding the flops

The EU AI Act and signing the pledge (or not!). Open Source or Open Washing? Kitware and DARPA. Cleverley and China’s DDE. Linux Foundation. NIST ARIA and ODI. RAND on Failing AI.

This article is approximately 1013 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


NVIDIA in oil and gas

GPU graph parallelism accelerates Shell’s traveling salesmen. SLB and Nvidia team on really cognitive AI. Aramco’s chatbot helps seismic processors.

This article is approximately 387 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


OSDU News

Data Platform Standard released. External data and MDIO. OSDU & Halliburton. Petronas and ‘readily available’ OSDU platform. SEG and OSDU seismic standards.

This article is approximately 900 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


Sales, partnerships, deployments …

Seeq partners with Velocity Insight. BP selects Audubon. EasyCopy teams with iGeos. Geophysical Insights gifts UT at Austin. Koch deploys Cognite. Shell signs L&TTS. BP extends Palantir deal. APA Corp. Deploys Palantir. TotalEnergies contracts Petrofac. Raptor Data teams with Archer Well Services. SLB signs with Nvidia, Palo Alto Networks. Shell award to Akselos. UP42 teams with Planet Labs. Stonehill deploys Inductive Automation/Edge Controls.

This article is approximately 652 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


Standards stuff

OpenSearch Software Foundation announced. CEN/CENELEC new data management TC. ISO IT change management guidance. IOGP reports – decommissioning, geodetic awareness, coordinate conversions and offshore infrastructure GIS data mode. NCCoE supply chain traceability meta-framework. OGC API – Maps approved. Alternative UoM standard from GeoSoft. SEC cybersecurity disclosure taxonomy. Linux Foundation ‘Margo’ for the edge. OPAS evaluation license.

This article is approximately 578 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


El Capitan’s exaflops. High Performance Software Foundation announced.

New DOE Excascale machine eschews NVIDIA, spawns the High Performcance Software Foundation.

This article is approximately 266 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


Cyber security round-up

SEI warns of the API security risk. SEI ‘Redemption’ toolkit announced. Halliburton victim of cyber breach. SmartSights on protecting oil and gas infrastructure. NIST’s Risk Management Framework. WorldLive oil county data hacked. SEC clarifies cyber disclosure rules. Skkynet ‘six ways to process security’. Many Android apps ‘too permission greedy’. Tietoevry update on ransomware attack. Wallix teams with Cisco.

This article is approximately 880 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


K:Spir

Koios master data rolls out spare parts interchangeability record

This article is approximately 154 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


Virtual strain gauge for pipeline monitoring

PHMSA/Berkeley study demonstrates monitoring of ‘quasi-static’ ground motion.

This article is approximately 209 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


MIT’s MandM Digital Twin

Unity game engine-based 3D digital twin provides monitoring and management of MIT’s supercomputer.

This article is approximately 175 words long. Click here if you would like to request a complimentary copy.


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© 1996-2024 The Data Room SARL All rights reserved. Web user only - no LAN/WAN Intranet use allowed. Contact.