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Shell Global Solutions has been using DNV Software's Safeti Performance Forecasting tools Maros and Taro for close to 15 years. The result is vastly improved bottom line.

"More and more, we're using Maros and Taro as strategic operational desicion tools. It's a real paradigm shift "

Used at a variety of levels
Maros and Taro were acquired by DNV Software in 2008, and are currently licensed to some of the world’s leading companies in the energy industry, including Exxon, Chevron, Petrobras and Hyundai Heavy Industries, to mention just a few.

Celesta White, Consultant for System Availability & Performance with Shell Projects & Technology in Houston, says that Maros, DNV Software’s RAM-based application tailored for the upstream oil and gas industry, and Taro, tailored for refinery, LNG supply chain and petrochemical plant management, have been used at a variety of levels within Shell.

The applications are part of DNV Software’s Safeti Performance Forecasting product line. Historically, they have been used mostly for project assurance in the design phase, ensuring that an asset’s design will be able to meet its production and/or availability targets.

“We started using Maros and Taro for operating assets in the past three to five years,” says White. “We’re using them as strategic operational tools to make data-driven decisions with an understanding of the risk associated with those decisions. We’re even using the tools to verify and validate business plans for next year.”

The applications are also used to quantify and prioritise reliability improvement initiatives. “We have a huge list of things we can do to improve reliability. Which of those should we give priority? We use them to get the biggest bang for our buck. In Shell we use a variety of tools for the analysis of system availability and performance. The majority of new studies we do today are in Taro or Maros. Some of the newer applications – such as reliability initiative prioritisation and business planning – we do almost exclusively in Taro and Maros,” says White.

Improved bottom line
Taro and Maros have been used by Shell to save 10 per cent of capital expenditure on new projects, to identify mitigation options that have increased production by 10 per cent, to reduce contracted storage costs by 5 per cent and to reduce shipping costs by 5–10 per cent without impacting global supply chain performance. Over the years, the bottom line has been vastly improved on assets where Maros and Taro have been utilised.

Competitive advantage
“Taro is one of the few tools on the market capable of determining the performance of complex systems involving storage, logistics and multiple products. A lot of functionality is built into the tool itself, and allows modelling of complex systems efficiently and effectively,” says White.

“Maros is capable of modelling multiple flow profiles (oil, gas and water), flaring operations and security of supply. It’s a tool that’s easy to use and models can easily be updated and maintained by site engineers. This helps transfer the ownership of the models, and the decisions they enable, from the modelling experts to the asset,” she says.

“With this methodology and the tools, we get the emotion out of the decision-making process. We give a quantitative basis for decisions by creating an understanding of system performance from an availability point of view.”

What do you do to mitigate upsets in system operations? How do you manage inventory to mitigate upsets? “There is another level of complexity there. It gives our decision makers a picture that is as close to reality as possible, including the amount of risk involved with the decisions being made,” says White.

Date: 2012-01-11

BY THE NUMBERS

DNV Software’s Safeti Performance Forecasting models (Maros and Taro) have been used to help make many risk-based decisions within Shell. The results of these decisions include:

- Identification of 10 per cent reduction in capital expenditure, while still meeting production targets.
- Identification of mitigation options to increase production by 10 per cent over historical performance to future production targets.
- Reduction in contracted storage costs by 5 per cent without impacting global supply chain performance.
- Reduction in shipping costs by 5–10 per cent without impacting global supply chain performance.

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