IFLEXX Meeting Highlights Data Communications Opportunity

21st September 2017

Logistics BusinessIFLEXX Meeting Highlights Data Communications Opportunity

On Tuesday, 13 companies from the German petroleum industry came together at BP in Bochum to discuss the progress made in standardized data communications. Both refinery and tank terminal operators as well as IT service providers followed the invitation from international software and consulting firm Implico to attend the 13th IFLEXX/PIDX meeting. One of the topics of this year’s industry meeting was the new PIDX Planned Movements standard.

Supply chains in the downstream sector are tightly networked, as transhipment hubs and their partners exchange enormous amounts of data every day. If the companies use different data formats, these processes become extremely complex. The IFLEXX Community, a group of leading companies from the German petroleum industry, has actively supported standardized data communication for many years. This week, the group met for its 13th meeting – this time at BP in Bochum.

After the welcome greeting, the organizers presented the latest developments from PIDX, the international counterpart of IFLEXX. Its recently introduced Planned Movements is a new standard format for transmitting order data from an ERP system to a terminal management system. It allows tank terminal operators to view all the relevant data on a planned load even before it is collected.

Converting oil and gas quantities

The IFLEXX members then discussed on-truck computer integration, data exchange portals, IT security and quantity conversion. Since the density and volume of petroleum products vary with temperature, all quantities are converted to an agreed reference temperature, which in Europe is 15 degrees Celsius. This ensures that companies within the supply chain mean the same thing when referring to a particular quantity. The IFLEXX standard therefore makes provision for the data records to employ different units of quantity at the same time. The system converts the quantities at the loading terminal. During the IFLEXX meeting, members discussed how the OpenTAS QCM converter can be used to validate the quantities.

In the afternoon, project managers explained how they had partnered with Implico to set up a standardized data exchange system with over 40 loading locations. Tank terminals and refineries in seven countries now transfer all their loading data to iGOS, a cloud service specializing in the oil and gas industry, where the data is checked, harmonized and sent in standardized PIDX format to the company’s SAP system.

The participants concluded the 13th IFLEXX meeting with a final round of discussions, which included a number of ideas and suggestions. “This year’s IFLEXX meeting was very informative. We saw once again that standardized data communication is an important concern for all members,” says Kay-Peter Buhtz, CEO of Implico. “We are particularly pleased that we were able to welcome a new member into our ranks this year. It is good to see that the IFLEXX Community is growing and that the jointly developed XML format has developed into a key standard for data communication in the oil and gas industry.”