Advertisement Halliburton has signed an eight-year contract with the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate (NPD) to deploy and operate Diskos, the Norwegian national repository of seismic, well and production data for the oil and gas industry.
Halliburton Landmark will deliver Diskos 2.0 using DecisionSpace
® 365 cloud services in iEnergy® – the industry’s first E&P hybrid cloud. The cloud native services are Open Subsurface Data Universe™ compliant and provide high quality data, security and governance so users can easily access, visualise and interpret data from the Norwegian Continental Shelf.
The open architecture and scalability of the service enables workflows across the repository and operator systems on premise, or in the cloud, to support efficient, effective and agile operations. Diskos 2.0 will use the DecisionSpace 365 cloud applications to apply machine learning and artificial intelligence to unlock the full value of subsurface data by revealing additional basin,
Halliburton to Provide Petroleum Data Management Platform for Norwegian Petroleum Directorate
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Norway s oil regulator taps Halliburton s cloud services to power its national data repository
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Nagaraj Srinivasan, Senior Vice President of Landmark, Halliburton Digital Solutions, and Consulting, Halliburton
In this Executive Conversation, thought leaders from TCS and Halliburton Landmark discuss digital transformation in the oil and gas business and describe some of the cutting-edge technologies that are helping the industry solve its most pressing problems.
The oil and gas industry is no stranger to downturns; price wars and supply chain disruptions have occurred throughout its history. The current slump, caused by an extreme imbalance in supply and demand, was already underway before pandemic-related business closures pushed it into overdrive.
But this time, additional forces are exacerbating the downturn. An increase in stakeholder demands to reduce emissions, declines in capital investment, the growth of renewables, an industrywide need to reduce costs, and shortages of the in-house technology skills needed to improve operations have all combined to create extraordin