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Transcript of Oil & gas telecommunications
A: Delivering Value on the Global WANBill Green, Global Account Director, Hermes Datacomms
8.30am-1.00pm
PLUS TWO INTERACTIVE PRE–CONFERENCE WORKSHOPSTuesday 19th March 2013, Copthorne Tara Hotel, London
www.oilandgastelecomms.comRegister online or alternatively fax your registration to +44 (0) 870 9090 712 or call +44 (0) 870 9090 711
SMi present their sixth annual conference on…
Oil and GasTelecommunicationsWednesday 20th and Thursday 21st March 2013Copthorne Tara Hotel, London
KEY SPEAKERS INCLUDE:
Sponsored by KEY BENEFITS OF ATTENDING:• Overcome telecommunication challenges in harsh environments and remote locations• Improve remote monitoring and control systems• Integrate broadband and remote sensing into digital oil and gas fields• Track assets in dangerous environments with wireless and satellite technologies• Improve communications infrastructure and network security for onshore and offshoreoperations
Murray McLaren, Field Telecomms Manager
and OPS Manager CNSFTC, BP
Andrew Mabian, Head Of Production
Operations, Systems and Business
Improvements / SmartFields Project
Manager, Shell/Salym Petroleum
Torbjørn Kristiansen, Leading Advisor,
Upstream Telecoms, Statoil
Philip Jones, Information Systems Security
Officer, GDF SUEZ E&P
David A. Barker, Senior IT Business Specialist,
Field Telecommunications,Marathon Oil
Andrew Derby, Telecoms Team Leader,
ABB UK Oil & Gas
Petros Theodorakis, Information &
Communications Technology Director, DESFA
Ian D. Theophilus, Global I.S. Infrastructure
Operations Manager, Tullow Oil
Fawaz Al-Khudhairy, Senior IT &
Communications Representative for King
Abdullah Petroleum Studies & Research
Center, Saudi Aramco
Ketil Moe, Executive Officer, 330 Squadron,
Royal Norwegian Air Force
Jan Robert Moen, Telecommunications
Advisor, Statoil
Frank Smiddy, Senior C & I Design Engineer,
Bord Gáis
Sadie Creese, Professor of Cybersecurity,
University of Oxford
John Williams, Director, Geospatial Data
Center,Massachusetts Institute of Technology
BOOK BY 7TH DECEMBER 2012 AND RECEIVE A £300 DISCOUNT BOOK BY 18TH JANUARY 2013 AND RECEIVE A £200 DISCOUNT
B: Safety and Protection in the Fifth Domain; Cyberspace andCritical Infrastructure Security
Tim Watson, Director, Cyber Security Centre, De Montfort University and Colin Williams, Visiting Lecturer, Cyber Security Centre, De Montfort University
1.30pm-5.30pm
CASE STUDY
CASE STUDY
Register online at www.oilandgastelecomms.com • Alternatively fax your registration
Day One I Wednesday 20th March 2013 www.oilandgasOil and Gas Telecommunications
8.30 Registration & Coffee
9.00 Chairman's Opening RemarksBill Green, Account Director, Hermes Datacomms
9.10 Realising the evolving communication needs of the oil and gas industry• Today’s technology drivers for resilient offshoretelecommunications
• Typical communications systems currently in use • The ideal telecommunications model to provide seamlessoffshore telecommunications
Murray McLaren, Field Telecomms Manager and OPSManager CNSFTC, BP
9.50 Getting it right first time• Getting the correct concept – using a predetermined model• Optimising the design – using a structured HAZID study• Lessons learned from Piper – What went wrong with thecomms?
• Lessons learned from BP Audit – you think it is OK until youdig deeper
• Deepwater Horizon – who was in charge where did thecommunication break down?
Frank Crawley, Honorary Research Fellow, University ofStrathclyde
10.30 Morning Coffee
INTEGRATING TETRA, BROADBAND AND WiMAX
10.50 Telecom system integration - the route ahead• New for old technology• Front-end monitoring and control• Combining telecom monitoring with automation Andrew Derby, Telecoms Team Leader, ABB UK Oil & Gas
11.30 TETRA broadband communications to meet today’s evolving needs • Competing or complementary services• The use of these services within the oil & gas industry• Hybrid solutionsFawaz Al-Khudhairy, Senior IT & CommunicationsRepresentative for King Abdullah Petroleum Studies &Research Center, Saudi Aramco
12.10 Networking Lunch
1.10 Reliable offshore broadband telecommunication infrastructure• Technical requirements• Combination of technologies (fibre optic cable, radio link,satellite)
• How we have succeeded- cooperation between operatingcompanies on the Norwegian Continental Shelf
• Experience with offshore broadband telecommunicationinfrastructure
Torbjørn Kristiansen, Leading Advisor, Upstream Telecoms,StatoilJan Robert Moen, Telecommunications Advisor, Statoil
1.50 Considerations for WiMAX networks• O&G needs• WiMax, conceptually, is a great idea• WiMax challenges in real-world deployments • Marathon todayDavid A. Barker, Senior IT Business Specialist, FieldTelecommunications, Marathon Oil
SATELLITE AND ASSOCIATED TECHNOLOGIES
2.30 Progress in oil & gas vertical telecommunications • Using satellite and associated technologies to connectremote locations; case studies from Ghana and Uganda,onshore and offshore
• The importance of multiple telecommunications channelsto support a 24/7 operation
• Responding to alternative telecommunications channels inpreviously unconnected locations
• A challenge to the network operators in terms of valueIan D. Theophilus, Global I.S. Infrastructure OperationsManager, Tullow Oil
3.10 Afternoon Tea
3.50 Managing DESFA’s ICT• A strategy for installing fibre optic cable• Current map of information technology• Current map of communications technology• Future communications strategyPetros Theodorakis, Information & CommunicationsTechnology Director, DESFA
4.30 Gas pipeline monitoring: moving from analogue to wireless• Utilising a network of wireless pressure and temperaturetransmitters
• 24-hour operation involving constant monitoring throughSCADA systems
• Providing redundant communication paths and betterreliability than direct, line-of-sight communications
Frank Smiddy, Senior C & I Design Engineer, Bord Gáis
5.10 myTrustedCloud: trust and cloud computing• The security limitations of cloud computing with specificfocus on their implications for business uptake
• Case study : The UK and EU energy industry. The security-critical requirements of this industry and the importance ofdata provenance verification
• Integration of trusted computing technologies into cloudcomputing. A prototype infrastructure showing how trusteddata and computing provenance has been implemented intopublicly available cloud computing platforms (Eucalyptusand OpenStack)
Matteo Turilli, Senior Research Associate, Oxford e-ResearchCentre, University of Oxford
5.50 Chairman's Closing Remarks and Close of Day One
SPONSORSHIP AND EXHIBITION OPPORTUNITIESSMi offer sponsorship, exhibition, advertising and
branding packages, uniquely tailored to complement yourcompany's marketing strategy. Should you wish to jointhe increasing number of companies benefiting from
promoting their business at our conferences please call: Jules Omura, SMi Sponsorship on
+44 (0)20 7827 6018 or email: [email protected]
Want to know how to get involved? Interested inpromoting your services to this market?
Contact Kiran Sharma, SMi Marketing on +44 (0)20 7827 6050 or email
Sponsored by
ABB is a highly qualified telecommunication solutionsprovider, specialising in turnkey projects for the oil and gasindustry. Including network systems, internal and externalcommunication, safety and security systems; CCTV, accesscontrol for both offshore and onshore installations. ABBalso provide integration with automation, safety andelectrical systems plus lifecycle support services. Moreinformation can be found at www.abb.co.uk/oilandgas
KEYNOTE ADDRESS
CASE STUDY
to +44 (0) 870 9090 712 or call +44 (0) 870 9090 711 • GROUP DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE
Supported by
telecomms.com Day Two I Thursday 21st March 2013OPENING ADDRESS
satnewspublishers
8.30 Registration & Coffee
9.00 Chairman's Opening RemarksBill Green, Account Director, Hermes Datacomms
9.10 Approaches to satellite networking: a critical evaluation of impact on capacity and quality of service• Delivering large communication capacity with limitedspectrum: How well are we doing in satellite communicationsand how much better can we do?
• Quality of service considerations in multimediacommunication networks
• Link characteristics of geostationary and non-geostationarysatellite orbits and impact on system architecture
• Transparent versus onboard processing transponders, andglobal versus narrow spot beam technologies
• Case studies of the Inmarsat, Iridium, Globalstar and otherapproaches in industry
Ifiok Otung, Professor of Satellite Communications, University of Glamorgan
OPERATIONS IN HARSH AND AND REMOTE LOCATIONS
9.50 Delivering communications in extreme environments• Hermes introduction• Global coverage• Our marketplace and challenges• Technologies in use• Case studiesBill Green, Account Director, Hermes Datacomms
10.30 Morning Coffee
10.50 The reality and tangible benefits of continuous field optimisation in Western Siberia• Introduction and Salym fields overview• Salym’s ‘Smart Fields’ concept and deployment phasing• Project impact and results achieved in Salym fields• Next steps and way forward – “sustain and maximise thebenefits”
Andrew Mabian, Head Of Production Operations, Systems andBusiness Improvements / SmartFields Project Manager,Shell/Salym Petroleum
11.30 Managing telecoms data at high altitudes- safety at sea in Norwegian arctic waters• Co-operation on aeronautical and maritime search and rescue(SAR) in the Arctic
• Communication, surveillance and monitoring• Use of sensors on persons and equipment for monitoringpeople and equipment in advanced and dangerous workoperations
• Infrastructure - traffic separation schemes and safe corridorsin areas with no or limited access to electronic navigationalcharts
• Seasonal and geographical optimized use of SAR resourcesbased on dynamic risk assessments, improved infrastructurefor communication and differential global navigation satellitesystems
Beate Kvamstad, Research Scientist, Marintek/SINTEF
12.10 Networking Lunch
1.30 Medevac helicopter service in the northern areas • Introduction to 330 Squadron (organisation, mission,operations area)
• Cooperation with other units• Means of communication • Necessity of radio systems when liaising with otheremergency services
• Challenges with satellite communications• Future integration of TETRA into communicationsinfrastructure
Ketil Moe, Executive Officer, 330 Squadron, Royal NorwegianAir Force
COMMUNICATION NETWORK VULNERABILITIES
2.10 Current cybersecurity threats• Understanding the vulnerabilities of global computer networks• Simulating cyber or physical attack scenarios• Network and software performance modeling after an attack• Applications to information synchronisation and availabilityacross global organisations
John Williams, Director, Geospatial Data Center and Professorof Information Engineering, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology
2.50 IT security on a greenfield offshore development• Why is InfoSec important to GDF SUEZ • Approaches & activity set • Self-assessment and benchmarking • The challengesPhilip Jones, Information Systems Security Officer, GDF SUEZ E&P
3.30 Afternoon Tea
3.50 Defending against APTs• Why the APT presents such a significant challenge• Current defence options• Limitations and challenges• Cutting edge thinking and future solutionsSadie Creese, Professor of Cybersecurity, University of Oxford
4.30 Safety and protection in the fifth domain; cyberspace and critical infrastructure security• Cyberspace is now the fifth domain of human existence withfull equivalence to land, sea, air and space
• Society has become functionally, if not existentially, dependantupon cyberspace, and cyberspace is transforming every aspectof the human condition
• Cyberspace has become both a critical infrastructure in itsown right and the infrastructure upon which all of the othersdepend
• There is no meaningful separation between industrial controlsystems and any other facet of cyberspace. Any attempt tomanage elements as though there were, will fail
• Simultaneously, cyberspace provides both these challengesand the means to address them
Colin Williams, Visiting Lecturer, Cyber Security Centre, De Montfort University
5.10 Chairman’s Closing Remarks and Close of Day Two
CASE STUDY
CASE STUDY
CASE STUDY
CASE STUDY
Delivering Value on the Global WAN8.30am-1.00pm
Workshop Overview:The workshop will cover the commercial and technicalaspects of provision of managed services on a globalbasis. The Oil & Gas sector is increasingly moving to acentralised data centre model and requires reliablecommunications with a consistent SLA across all sites.The workshop will show demonstrations of latesttechnology and service management tools as well asnetworking and discussions sessions.
Who should attend: C-level personnel and senior IT managers. Costsavings and resource to manage your global WAN areincreasingly on the agenda from not only the CFO butthe CIO and IT Management team. Find out how tooptimize costs and resource whilst retaining controlevidenced by current case studies.
Timetable:8:30 Registration & Coffee 9:00 Chairman's Opening Remarks - Introductions 9:15 Introduction to Hermes Datacomms 9:30 Managed Network Services Overview –
Intelligent Network Outsourcing 10:00 Managing a Global Network
• Organisation considerations• Geographical Planning• Who’s IP is it anyway? - Responsibilities of customer and provider
• How much do you outsource to gain maximumbenefit?
10:30 Morning Coffee 11:00 Technologies to support a Global Network
• Designing and building a Global Network• What is the Real SLA and MTTR?• Demonstrations- Voice QoS- Throughput Optimisation- NetFlow- Overcoming Latency Issues- Riverbed Acceleration- Out of Band Management
12:00 Discussion Forum – Current Issues and SharedLearning
1:00 End of workshop and private consultationswith attendees
About your workshop leader:Bill Green has worked in the Internationalcommunications arena for over 14 years,including generating over £100M of sales forBT. Bill currently serves as Global AccountDirector at Hermes Datacomms, where he
manages the Intelligent Network Outsourceproposition, providing global communications networksfor oil & gas companies in both 'business as usual' andhostile and challenging environments.
About Hermes:Hermes is a British company owned by its directorsand backed by private equity with over 20 years ofexperience providing high quality, reliable and efficientcommunications to the oil & gas industry, particularlyin difficult and challenging locations. Hermes have astrong regional presence in the Middle East, Americas,Europe, Africa, Asia Pacific, Russia and Central Asiaacross all communication technologies.
HALF DAY PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOPTuesday 19th March, 2013
Copthorne Tara Hotel, London
In association with
B: Safety and Protection in theFifth Domain; Cyberspace andCritical Infrastructure Security
1.30pm-5.30pm
Workshop Overview:The cyber domain has added an entirely new set ofdimensions to the patterns of interconnection andinterdependence that we analysed and organised for at theturn of the last century. It has changed the actuality of, ifnot yet our thinking about, our critical infrastructures. Thisworkshop explores the implications of cyberspace as amatrix of interconnectivity that encompasses industrialcontrol systems including SCADA.
By attending this workshop, you will: • Gain fresh insights in to the origins and nature ofcyberspace.
• Develop an understanding of the consequences ofconceptualising cyberspace as the fifth domain ofhuman existence.
• Explore the implications of cyberspace as a matrixof interconnections that encompasses IndustrialControl Systems including SCADA and to developan understanding about what this means for thesecurity of critical infrastructure.
Timetable:1.30 Registration and Coffee2.00 Chairmen’s opening remarks2.10 The origins of cyberspace in mind and matter.
• The ideas that created cyberspace• The machines that created cyberspace
2.40 The internet of things• When the virtual becomes real• The myth of the discreet system
3.10 The great interconnectedness of everything• The world after CodeRed• The end of the hierarchical network
3.40 Afternoon tea4.00 The imminent singularity
• The robots are coming• And they can think
4.30 "Tea, Earl Grey, hot"• Printing reality• The economic and social transformations of corporeal printing
5.00 Securing the fifth domain• Cyberspace as the fifth domain of human existence• Harnessing complexity and interconnection toachieve safety and protection in the fifth domain
5.30 End of workshop and private consultationswith attendees
About your workshop leaders:Dr Tim Watson is the Director of the Cyber SecurityCentre at De Montfort University. With more thantwenty years' experience in the computing industryand in academia, he has been involved with a widerange of computer systems on several high-profileprojects and has acted as a consultant for some ofthe largest telecoms, power and oil companies. He
has also designed, produced and delivered a number of courseson cyber security for a variety of public and private-sectororganisations.
Colin Williams, Director of SBL and a VisitingLecturer in the Cyber Security Centre at De MontfortUniversity. Colin regularly speaks, consults and writeson matters to do with Information Assurance, cybersecurity, business development and enterprise levelsoftware procurement, to public sector audiences andclients at home and abroad.
About The Cyber Security Centre (CSC):The Cyber Security Centre (CSC) is a multidisciplinary group ofacademics and industry experts who focus on a wide variety ofcyber protection issues. The Centre's mission is to provide thefull benefits to all of a safe, secure and resilient cyberspace.The CSC combines a thorough understanding of the real-worlddigital environment with deep insights into its underlyingfoundations. From the subtle, technical aspects of networksecurity and live forensics through to the intricate interplaybetween economics, psychology, policies and practice, the CSCcombines expertise across disciplines to producetransformational solutions to hard problems.
HALF DAY PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOPTuesday 19th March, 2013
Copthorne Tara Hotel, London
In association with
OIL AND GAS TELECOMMUNICATIONSWednesday 20th and Thursday 21st March, 2013, Copthorne Tara Hotel, London Workshop: 19th March 2013
4 WAYS TO REGISTER
FAX your booking form to +44 (0) 870 9090 712PHONE on +44 (0) 870 9090 711
ONLINE AT www.oilandgastelecomms.com
If you have any further queries please call the Events Team on tel +44 (0) 870 9090 711 or you can email them at [email protected]
□ Book by 7th December and receive a £300 discount off conference price□ Book by 18th January and receive a £200 discount off conference price
EARLY BIRDDISCOUNT
Payment must be made to SMi Group Ltd, and received before the event, by one of thefollowing methods quoting reference E-027 and the delegate’s name. Bookings made within 7 days of the event require payment on booking, methods of payment are below. Pleaseindicate method of payment:□ UK BACS Sort Code 300009, Account 00936418□ Wire Transfer Lloyds TSB Bank Plc, 39 Threadneedle Street, London, EC2R 8AU
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POST your booking form to: Events Team, SMi Group Ltd, 2nd Floor South,Harling House, 47-51 Great Suffolk Street, London, SE1 0BS
Payment: If payment is not made at the time of booking, then an invoice will be issued and must be paidimmediately and prior to the start of the event. If payment has not been received then credit card details willbe requested and payment taken before entry to the event. Bookings within 7 days of event require paymenton booking. Access to the Document Portal will not be given until payment has been received.
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I would like to attend: (Please tick as appropriate) Fee TOTALCOMMERCIAL ORGANISATIONS□ Conference & 2 Workshops £2697.00 + VAT £3236.40□ Conference and 1 Workshop A □ B □ £2098.00 + VAT £2517.60□ Conference Only £1499.00 + VAT £1798.80□ 1 Workshop Only A □ B □ £599.00 + VAT £718.80□ 2 Workshops Only £1198.00 + VAT £1437.60
OIL AND GAS COMPANIES□ Conference & 2 Workshops £2097.00 + VAT £2516.40□ Conference and 1 Workshop A □ B □ £1498.00 + VAT £1797.60□ Conference Only £899.00 + VAT £1078.80□ 1 Workshop Only A □ B □ £599.00 + VAT £718.80□ 2 Workshops Only £1198.00 + VAT £1437.60
PROMOTIONAL LITERATURE DISTRIBUTION □ Distribution of your company’s promotional
literature to all conference attendees £999.00 +VAT £1198.80
The conference fee includes refreshments, lunch, conference papers and access to the Document Portal containing all of the presentations.