Husky Energy to use AVEVA technology for value chain digitalisation
Published by Tom Mostyn,
Editorial Assistant
Hydrocarbon Engineering,
AVEVA has signed an agreement with Calgary-based integrated oil and gas company Husky Energy to deliver an end-to-end supply chain management solution for Husky’s downstream business. The cloud-based solution will enable Husky to plan and schedule its enterprise value chain from crude supply to product distribution through a single and unified system.
“We have adopted our operating model to feature integrated optimisation, increasing the total revenue and gross margin captured across the entire value chain,” said Pat Conrath, Director of Optimization at Husky. “AVEVA’s technology provides an enterprise cloud solution that enhances collaboration, agility and transparency across our value chain, helping us make decisions that deliver added value to the integrated business.”
Husky identified a need to automate business processes, including integrating and standardising its value chain activities across the downstream business. AVEVA’s Spiral Unified Supply Chain Management solution will enable Husky’s team to plan and schedule its end-to-end downstream value chain.
“All too often, embedded process silos based on point solutions cost companies both time and profitability. AVEVA’s comprehensive software portfolio gives our clients the highest levels of efficiency and enables true value chain optimisation,” said Harpreet Gulati, Vice President of Planning and Operations at AVEVA.
AVEVA’s Spiral Unified Supply Chain Management is designed to address each component of the value chain, from feedstock data management, trading, production planning and network optimisation, to scheduling and performance monitoring.
Read the article online at: https://www.hydrocarbonengineering.com/gas-processing/20062019/husky-energy-to-use-aveva-technology-for-value-chain-digitalisation/
You might also like
Study finds more US LNG is needed to curb Asia’s surging coal use
Coal use and emissions from power generation in Asia will surge in coming decades unless there is significant new supply of US LNG, a new study by Wood Mackenzie has shown.