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Shell CIO to Begin Testing AI-Enabled Drones at Houston Plant
Posted on 12/18/18 at 8:42 am
Posted on 12/18/18 at 8:42 am
quote:
Royal Dutch Shell PLC is testing how artificial intelligence-enabled drones could help prevent costly maintenance problems on expensive equipment while improving worker safety, said Jay Crotts, the oil company’s executive vice president and global chief information officer.
Beginning early next year, the company will deploy several drones in a proof-of-concept project at the Shell Technology Center in Houston, which encompasses 1.2 million square feet and 44 buildings of laboratory and office space.
“Drones can inspect different equipment that could be too hot for individuals to be near. They can help us detect [anomalies by] keeping people out of harm’s way,” Mr. Crotts said.
The drones and their accompanying cloud-based platform, which runs on Amazon Web Services, are made by Kespry Inc., a company that has raised $61 million in venture capital funding to date, according to George Mathew, chief executive of Kespry.
In late 2017, Shell invested in Kespry’s $33 million funding round through its investment arm Shell Technology Ventures, now called Shell Ventures. Mr. Crotts oversees the team responsible for evaluating and researching potential startup investments.
quote:
Drones are becoming important in Internet of Things strategies for enterprise companies, according to research and advisory firm Gartner Inc. At least 2.1 million commercial drones will be flying world-wide by 2020, according to Gartner. By that year, many of the top commercial drone manufacturers also will offer services such as analytical software packages, Gartner said.
However, drone laws still need to be worked out by the Federal Aviation Administration, which is significantly behind earlier schedules for crafting airborne-identification rules for drones. Trade-association leaders now see final FAA regulatory action stretching into 2022, The Wall Street Journal previously reported.
Flying at a maximum height of about 8,000 feet and weighing about 4 pounds, Shell’s drones will collect images of the Houston facility using cameras and infrared sensors. The data will be analyzed by machine-learning algorithms within a cloud-based platform to identify mechanical or structural issues such as leaks in pipes. The drones are controlled by mobile apps instead of joysticks, said Mr. Mathew of Kespry.
If the pilot is proved to be successful and Shell expands it to other facilities, the cost savings from Shell’s drone deployment next year could be in the millions of dollars, especially because drones can check for maintenance issues every few days, Mr. Crotts said.
Normally, humans would check for issues every few months and sometimes equipment would be shut down for manual inspections, Mr. Crotts said. “We’d have to shut down the plant or a reactor before we put humans in there,” he said. “(Now) we’ll look at it from a remote, safe distance, with more frequency.”
Human engineers also normally walk around an oil-and-gas plant and listen for machines that sound like they’re malfunctioning. Sensors and data from drones can predict much more accurately how a piece of equipment is performing, Mr. Crotts said. He said the goal isn’t to replace humans with drones; rather, the drones could help the human workers resolve more potential maintenance issues quicker and more efficiently.
In the future, advanced analytics and machine-learning software will be a key competitive differentiator for drone companies, Mr. Crotts said. The cloud-based machine-learning software that comes along with Kespry’s drones is particularly useful for Shell, he said.
Machine learning is a subfield of artificial intelligence that refers to the science of getting computers to act intelligently without being explicitly programmed. Kespry’s software can turn two-dimensional images of structures and equipment into three-dimensional images. Machine- learning algorithms can automatically analyze the photographs, as well as thermal imaging data, for anomalies such as water leaks.
quote:
Having data gathered by the drone all in one with a cloud-based platform also makes it easier to analyze, Mr. Crotts said. “Fewer (cloud) platforms with data consolidated is a much better answer than fragmented, disperse platforms from a variety of different vendors,” Mr. Crotts said.
After the pilot program, which could take a few months, Shell will determine whether the drones should scale beyond the Houston facility, Mr. Crotts said.
Plant baws watch out their coming for your yobs
Posted on 12/18/18 at 8:42 am to Mingo Was His NameO
Do you want Skynet?
Because, this is how you get Skynet.
Because, this is how you get Skynet.
Posted on 12/18/18 at 8:43 am to Mingo Was His NameO
Need to see what this will do to the truck nut market
Posted on 12/18/18 at 8:44 am to Mingo Was His NameO
Will the robots drive f250s to work?
Posted on 12/18/18 at 8:49 am to Mingo Was His NameO
We already use drones for above ground tank roof and flare inspections.
The drone still needs a pilot, and can’t perform maintenance work. This will only add jobs.
The drone still needs a pilot, and can’t perform maintenance work. This will only add jobs.
This post was edited on 12/18/18 at 8:51 am
Posted on 12/18/18 at 8:52 am to Mingo Was His NameO
quote:
Plant baws watch out their coming for your yobs
Now they can stay at home and watch out the window for Jody
Posted on 12/18/18 at 8:53 am to DuckManiak
quote:
This will only add jobs
Disagree as does the CIO of shell, but I'm sure you know better than him so frick it
Posted on 12/18/18 at 8:54 am to Mingo Was His NameO
please name the drones Kayyden and Jaxxyn and Bren'leigh
Posted on 12/18/18 at 8:56 am to Lawyered
quote:
please name the drones Kayyden and Jaxxyn and Bren'leigh
Posted on 12/18/18 at 9:00 am to Mingo Was His NameO
quote:
Disagree as does the CIO of shell, but I'm sure you know better than him so frick it
quote:
He said the goal isn’t to replace humans with drones; rather, the drones could help the human workers resolve more potential maintenance issues quicker and more efficiently.
Nah, I just use reading comprehension.
Posted on 12/18/18 at 9:03 am to DuckManiak
quote:
Nah, I just use reading comprehension.
Yeah man, he's just going to come out and say "Yeah we hope to be able to lay off a couple hundred maintenance guys to save on salary expense." Read the article, it's pretty clear the objective is the replace labor with the drones.
This post was edited on 12/18/18 at 9:15 am
Posted on 12/18/18 at 9:13 am to Mingo Was His NameO
And so it begins... well baws... humanity had a good run. I don't know about you guys, but i'm going to go down fighting.
Posted on 12/18/18 at 9:19 am to Mingo Was His NameO
quote:
Yeah man, he's just going to come out and say "Yeah we hope to be able to lay off a couple hundred maintenance guys to save on salary expense." Read the article, it's pretty clear the objective is the replace labor with the drones.
And drones still require maintenance, pilots, and all other sorts of costs/labor. Drones in plants is hardly a new idea and they are used all over south Louisiana. Big companies like shell are just now getting into the race because they don't want to have to keep hiring outside companies to do it.
This post was edited on 12/18/18 at 9:20 am
Posted on 12/18/18 at 9:22 am to Ed Osteen
quote:
And drones still require maintenance, pilots, and all other sorts of costs/labor
No shite, just way different kind and less of a headcount
Posted on 12/18/18 at 9:23 am to Mingo Was His NameO
quote:
Read the article, it's pretty clear the objective is the replace labor with the drones.
That’s not clear from the article. Operators and PEI crew use what’s called sensory rounds when inspecting equipment. This is only a small percentage of the work that they do. You have to be knowledgeable and familiar with the equipment to know if something is off. This could take anywhere from 6-12 months of working a certain area of the refinery. If anything, all this article is stating, is that these drones will negate the need for sensory rounds.
A drone can’t fix a problem. It can only identify one.
Posted on 12/18/18 at 9:24 am to Ed Osteen
quote:
And drones still require maintenance, pilots, and all other sorts of costs/labor. Drones in plants is hardly a new idea and they are used all over south Louisiana. Big companies like shell are just now getting into the race because they don't want to have to keep hiring outside companies to do it.
Posted on 12/18/18 at 9:28 am to DuckManiak
quote:
Operators and PEI crew use what’s called sensory rounds when inspecting equipment. This is only a small percentage of the work that they do
So since there will be less work, there will be less need for people, got it.
quote:
You have to be knowledgeable and familiar with the equipment to know if something is off. This could take anywhere from 6-12 months of working a certain area of the refinery
Or you could have a machine that already knows the answer.
quote:
If anything, all this article is stating, is that these drones will negate the need for sensory rounds.
Correct, less demand fpr that type of labor.
quote:
A drone can’t fix a problem. It can only identify one
Oh so it does the same thing that you are talking about people doing above?
Posted on 12/18/18 at 9:30 am to Mingo Was His NameO
This is you right now
Posted on 12/18/18 at 9:31 am to Tyga Woods
I have blonde hair baw, and I don't wear t shirts
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