Booz Allen Announces Top Six Oil and Gas Industry Trends for 2014
MCLEAN, Va - Tuesday, October 22nd 2013 [ME NewsWire]
(BUSINESS
WIRE)-- Today’s oil and gas industry executives – including control
room operators monitoring use data, chief information security officers
analyzing the potential cyber security risks of a new IT system, and oil
rig managers discussing drilling sites with geologists – are making
business decisions in an interconnected landscape of risks and rewards.
Success demands balancing the dizzying array of new regulations, cutting
edge technology, and emerging threats and opportunities that are ever
present in this industry.
“Partnering with our oil and gas
clients, we examine the near and long-term trends for this industry, and
it is striking to see how regulation, the cyber threat environment, and
internal challenges are converging to shape the path forward,” said
Emile Trombetti, senior vice president, Booz Allen. “It is critical that
industry leaders consider how these trends provide challenges and
opportunities for their organizations that can ultimately help them
better prioritize and meet their strategic and business goals.”
Booz
Allen Hamilton has identified the six key trends that are poised to
greatly impact the oil and gas sector of tomorrow, and that what every
oil and gas executive needs to know today.
Top Six Energy Industry Trends for 2014:
1.
The
technology supply chain will increase the need for cyber risk
management. Oil and gas companies recognize that embracing networked
infrastructures allows them to more efficiently operate their business,
and in doing so, they increasingly rely upon vendor materials, products
and services. However, the industry is only now coming to terms with the
cyber risk management challenges created by a more open network and
increased reliance on the technology supply chain. Oil and gas leaders
must address the weighty task of assessing the security of third-party
vendors and protecting critical business assets from those who should
not have access or who wish to disrupt the business.
2.
Cyber
risk management will become more customized. Every oil and gas company
stands to be hacked, and only so much can be done to thwart this threat.
Companies must create unique approaches to minimize the impact of an
attempted attack, and protect critical assets. In particular, oil and
gas companies need to focus on developing comprehensive security risk
management plans tailored to the circumstances when entering high-risk
environments, such as ventures into new geographic locations, markets
and products.
3.
Future
competitive advantages depend on technological innovation. Until
recently, oil and gas companies did not innovate beyond what was
required to pull resources out of the ground with a reasonable amount of
success. However, there has been a noticeable shift as companies begin
to view technology as a new frontier for competitive advantage.
Oil
and gas companies are using the latest ideas, such as mobility, cloud
computing, and knowledge management, and wrapping them around their
current processes to make everything work better. However, as innovation
takes off, companies must turn their attention to protecting the
R&D that went into creating this intellectual property, which
creates another layer of security that must then be implemented.
4.
Striking
the right balance between strong cyber risk management and regulation
will become more challenging. Regulations help companies secure
themselves from cyber threats. However, regulations apply a
one-size-fits-all method to security that does not take into account
each company’s “attack surface,” the unique vulnerabilities that come
with its specific business processes. Often there are competing
priorities between addressing what is required by regulation and what is
genuinely needed at the time to effectively protect the company’s
systems from cyber intrusions.
Also,
firms must always stay abreast of the constantly changing regulatory
environment. Just as energy companies achieve compliance under current
regulations, new regulations are developed. Oil and gas companies must
balance a host of issues, such as compliance with environmental
regulations, while balancing geopolitical issues that can have material
impact on the bottom line.
5.
An
aging workforce is creating unique risk management, infrastructure, and
HR challenges. The oil and gas industry is facing a shrinking talent
pool for those with specialized expertise. Most individuals who have the
institutional and technological “know how” about their organization’s
specific cyber risks and operations are looking toward retirement. This
creates a knowledge gap that younger employees cannot meet on their own,
and requires oil and gas leaders to work across their business to
capture, retain, and integrate human capital intelligence. According to
Ernst & Young, nearly 90 percent of senior human resources
executives at 22 top international oil and gas companies believe their
industry faces a talent shortage and call the problem one of the top
five business issues facing their companies.
6.
Data
will continue to create differentiators. Oil and gas companies are
facing an explosion in the amount and types of data that their assets
generate, yet they risk being less competitive if they do not make this
data work for them. Organizations must also understand that while their
data presents business opportunities, it also raises certain challenges.
For example, industry leaders must determine how to analyze and present
their data in a way that allows the firm to create action, both in
terms of driving business strategies and in understanding anomalies
associated with their critical assets.
A recent ABI Research
study predicted that cyber attacks against oil and gas infrastructure
will cost companies $1.87 billion by 2018: “Cyber Risk Management is now
a Board level risk that every company involved in Oil and Gas
production must address. Wherever there is an intelligent device,
whether it be a complex set of devices controlling a oil platform, or
even a simple device that controls the opening and closing of a valve on
the pipeline, they could be at risk of being controlled by an
unauthorized entity. Oil and Gas executives are becoming more resigned
to the fact that much more must be done in executing an effective cyber
risk management program.”
Booz Allen works with a variety of oil
and gas industry firms to provide a carefully curated set of solutions
that help them gain a competitive advantage and manage a wide spectrum
of issues. For example, Real Time Analytics resources better inform
capital project management programs and help companies determine where
and when to invest. Booz Allen’s industry expertise gives oil and gas
companies access to a diverse array of institutional experts around the
world who understand the clients’ unique challenges and opportunities.
About Booz Allen Hamilton
Booz
Allen Hamilton is a leading provider of management consulting,
technology, and engineering services to the U.S. government in defense,
intelligence, and civil markets, and to major corporations,
institutions, and not-for-profit organizations. Booz Allen is
headquartered in McLean, Virginia, with a MENA headquarters in Abu
Dhabi, employs more than 23,000 people, and had revenue of $5.76 billion
for the 12 months ended March 31, 2013.
BAHPR-GI
Contacts
Booz Allen Hamilton
Media Contact:
Carrie Lake 703-377-7785
Lake_Carrie@bah.com
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