| | OCTOBER 20159CIOReviewdynamic, and allow people to tackle issues remotely in safe environments, but that search for cutting-edge digital solutions has been given added impetus by the present market conditions and industry trends.GE is hooking up companies to the Industrial Internet to provide them with a complete and accurate view of assets ­ wherever they are, their status and health - bringing unity and connectivity to disassembled and amorphous operations. Our technology allows users to glean penetrating insights into the efficacy of their international apparatus, helping them to predict, diagnose and fix problems before they are faced with unplanned downtime. By sharing data and knowledge we can help customers optimise their maintenance strategies to guarantee greater operational efficiency and longer term durability. Earlier this year, we announced a project with BP to link up 650 wells to optimize their production. Given that each week a subsea well is out of commission, operators experience revenue losses of more than $3 million­ the prize is significant.In fact, if the Industrial Internet was able to achieve just a one percent efficiency improvement in the oil and gas sector the results would be seismic. With the average world oil recovery rate now hovering at around 35 percent, if we can use the Industrial Internet to drive it up to 36 percent, then we can lift output by the equivalent of about three years of global oil production, or more than 80 billion barrels of expanded conventional oil reserves.The industrial internet can foster greater collaboration and horizontal communication within businesses. The startling potential may not be the solution to the ongoing battle of the globe's major oil producers, but it is certainly a game changing innovation that can provide companies with the competitive edge to drive a more efficient, more predictable operation.As the Oil & Gas industry evolves into a new world of connected operations, the role of the CIO will become even more integral given the IT technologies that are being embedded in the heavy machinery used by operators. IT organizations are well staffed and positioned to support and exploit the growing use of IT technologies in operations and CIO's will need to think about how to best support and capitalize on the explosion of data that is coming online. At Gartner's annual conference, GE CEO, Jeff Immelt reiterated this when he said, "CIO's are now the leaders of innovation and the drivers of new businesses." In fact, in GE's Oil & Gas division, the IT organization is playing a critical role alongside R&D in developing new Industrial Internet applications and has also been tasked with establishing the business infrastructure and processes, including a new customer support operation, required to grow this new line of business. These are a few examples of where GE has disrupted its own IT organization to help the business innovate and evolve in this new digital era, in order to help our customers do the same. By sharing data and knowledge we can help customers optimise their maintenance strategies to guarantee greater operational efficiency and longer term durability
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