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493310
Thu, 05/24/2018 - 15:45
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ADIPEC 2018 to unlock opportunities in digitalisation

ABU DHABI, 24th May, 2018 (WAM) -- Unlocking the opportunities that will flow from digitalisation will be a key focus for the 2018 edition of the world’s leading oil and gas event, the Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Exhibition and Conference, ADIPEC. Held under the patronage of President His Highness Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, hosted by the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company and supported by the UAE Ministry of Energy, the Abu Dhabi Chamber, and the Abu Dhabi Tourism and Culture Authority, the event will take place from 12th to 15th November, at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre. Speaking about the importance of the digitalisation in the industry, Jean-Philippe Cosse, Vice President – Energy at dmg events, said, "Digitalisation is an urgent priority for industry CEOs and business leaders, offering cost savings, operational improvements, and safety and environmental gains that will reach into every corner of the business, but the opportunities come with risks that must be understood and navigated. "What we are seeing is a profound disruption to business-as-usual, which will have long-lasting effects. ADIPEC is responding to this with a new ‘Digitalisation in Energy zone, supporting innovation, and helping drive smart investments that will be the foundations of business success in the years ahead," he added. The Digitalisation in Energy zone will include top technology providers and new start-ups serving the oil and gas sector. A purpose-built Innovation Theatre will provide tech companies with the opportunity to host expert talks and take digitalisation out of the technology silo and place it at the centre of a much bigger conversation. Conference sessions for the downstream refining and petrochemicals sector, introduced for 2017, will return to ensure that ADIPEC covers each link in the oil and gas value chain. The co-located waterfront Offshore and Marine Exhibition and Conference will add a commercial dive zone, while other returning features include the ADIPEC Awards, which celebrate excellence in energy, and Young ADIPEC, a dedicated ‘edutainment’ programme designed to encourage students to choose a career in energy. New for 2018 will be an Inclusion and Diversity in Energy conference programme, continuing and expanding on the work of the Women in Energy conference in previous years. Hosting more than 80 ministers, CEOs, and global oil and gas business leaders as speakers, ADIPEC brings together the companies, decision and policy makers that shape the future of oil and gas supply, for four days of focused business, dialogue and knowledge transfer that addresses today’s energy challenges and defines tomorrow’s hydrocarbon landscape. Alongside the conference will be the landmark ADIPEC exhibition areas, underpinning the event’s status as a premier showcase for suppliers and customers across the oil and gas industry. For 2018, ADIPEC is expected to attract more than 2,200 exhibiting companies. Digitalisation is the number-one trend driving CEO decision-making in the global oil and gas sector. According to recent research by an international consulting firm, McKinsey, a range of interconnected emerging technologies have the power to unlock a potential US$50 billion in savings and increased profit. Encompassing fields such as Artificial Intelligence, AI, the blockchain, robotics, sensor technology, machine learning, deep learning, and edge computing, digitalisation is expected to cut capital expenditure by 20 percent, with operating costs in upstream cut 3-5 percent and 1-3 percent in downstream. The related benefits to energy companies, their customers, and the wider society, are even greater, estimated to reach US$1.6 trillion over the next seven years, according to data presented at the 2017 World Economic Forum Annual Meeting. Environmental benefits include reducing CO2-equivalent emissions by approximately 1,300 million tonnes, saving about 800 million gallons of water, and avoiding oil spills equivalent to about 230,000 barrels of oil.

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