Are you ready to transform your business?
The World Economic Forum estimates that US$1.3 trillion of value could be captured globally from rapid digitalisation in the electricity sector. The rewards and opportunities are enormous - but in practice progress is patchy and many companies are worried that implementing new solutions will be challenging and disruptive. Most agree that it’s important to start on the digitalisation journey – but how and where?
In this webinar we will look at ways in which EPCs (Engineering, Procurement and Construction) companies can start their journey by moving to the latest generation of integrated, data-centric tools – tools that focus on creating and managing the data that, that not only underpin the EPC process itself but also deliver into the newly emerging requirements of the power plant operator – enabling their clients to gear up their own digitalisation programs as they onboard a new plant. Learn how companies adopting this approach are not only better placed to win more work – but benefit from major productivity and efficiency gains too.
We will also look at some of the tools and technologies that enable power plant operators themselves to make major steps forward as they begin their own digitalisation journeys. Practical methods and proven tools to evolve from a document centric information world to a data centric world – creating the essential data infrastructure that is required at the heart of any plant digitalisation initiative.
Join Bob Aldridge, Senior Business Strategy Manager at AVEVA Solutions on Wednesday, 7th March 2018 to learn more.
Presented by
Bob Aldridge,
Senior Business Strategy Manager at AVEVA
Bob focuses on AVEVA’s Integrated Engineering & Design and Information Management Solutions for the power industry. Bob has worked at AVEVA for more than 35 years, in a wide variety of roles ranging from product development and deployment through to marketing and strategy – all with a focus on the process plant and power industries. Before joining AVEVA, Bob worked for a UK chemicals company, and was educated at Nottingham University where he holds a PhD in Chemical Engineering.