 Felly, rydyn ni'n Ritchie Griffiths, a enw i'r penall a wneud yr tearod yn g explodellol. Felly, ydych chi'n ddelad gefnog gfreddau dewis y Gymdeithasol yw awr, yn eu cyflwydoedd cyrraffon iawn â'r cyflogaeth eu cyflwydoedd cyrraffon iawn, fel y gall gweithio yn ysgolwyr yn wychosio gwaith as a system integrator to the energy industry with respect to OSDU data platform based solutions. Today I'd like to talk to you about some of the insights that we've had working with our clients in this innovation space over the last three years. We've just seen some very interesting technical presentations regarding interoperability. But to conclude this session this afternoon, I'd like to talk to you about a different perspective of interoperability, what I call dimensions. As a systems integrator, Wipro supports anhelistic view of our client's needs when discussing the adoption, use and interoperability dimensions of working with the OSTU data platform. An OSTU data platform journey has many touch points across an entire organisation and the focus is not just about the data or about the cloud infrastructure. It relates the relationships between everything that's going on in the organisation. Regardless of which area you work in or you belong to, there are connections and interactions and dependencies between you all. By approaching this journey through a systemic lens and bringing your stakeholders together, you can achieve anhelistic organisational understanding of your wants and needs now and in the future. So, in the short time that we've got today, I just want to try and touch on a few of these things. Values to users, what does it mean, who are they? The relationships between applications and data. What does cloud adoption mean to an organisation and lastly now and in the future, how do we get there? Firstly, I'd like to talk about the user and to be honest, there's too many of them to be able to give them all justice today. There's many of them and they're potentially different in different organisations but here's a few to just get us thinking about it. But why is this important? Well, our resources are the lifeblood of our organisations. If we hamper their abilities to perform, it can directly affect the success in whatever we're doing. Each has their own specialisms, each can work with specific data types and can have preferred applications and ways of working. Most of them at some point will also need to collaborate and in the past this could have been problematic as data has been siloed and difficult to share and combined. The concept of the OCU data platform and the data centric nature of bringing all this data together into a centralised and controlled and secure environment is changing the perceptions of the energy industry as to how it can collaborate in the future. But due to the sheer amounts of subsurface and geotechnical data used across the industry, there is still a way to go before we can consume all the data we'd like. This may be frustrating but it's also the catalyst for how the forum needs to pull together sharing our thoughts, insights and capabilities to get to where we want to be. As an example of interoperability, one of our clients used the OCU data platform to streamline and control their well-planning process. They integrated their users and their applications and their data and their infrastructure and all their workflows. Then they shared this with the forum. This insight is what stimulates thoughts that leads to new initiatives within the forum. This type of collaboration is one of the elements of value and the OSDU can bring to an organisation. Domain experts are able to quickly access and share the correct quality assured information. This is just one area where time savings are made, faster and more confident decision making. Reducing the cycle time to outcome has already been proven to be profitable but these activities don't happen in isolation. This leads to the next thing about applications. For a long time, the industry has operated in what we could call an application-centric environment. The applications we use are integral to what we do and how we do it. As you can see, it's taken centre stage in the interoperability diagram. This is an image that will be familiar to a lot of you. It provides the conceptual view of how the OSDU-based environment is stacked and in there right in the middle are our applications. We'll continue to rely on them but we also need them to evolve. Working with our clients, we find that they have preferred vendors. However, the appetite for changes there if vendors are unwilling to adapt to a different way of doing things. Lucky for us all, the ISV community has and continues to embrace the OSDU and the view of how the industry is moving forward. This middle space is one where interoperability can be tangibly encountered. Weprol has worked with and continues to work with ISVs to assist in embracing the OSDU perspective. As this gives the users the maximum opportunities to not only continue to operate with their current vendors, providing seamless adaptation but where needed, open up new opportunities in this application services space. But where is the value? Well, it can now come from the synchronicity of data between applications that can now be achieved. No longer do asset teams or data managers need to expend time and energy bringing data together from disparate application silos. It will be available via the OSDU data platform. This simplistic view belies the complexities that actually exist underneath. This complexity can exist in many different forms. But by ensuring that the synergies between the dimension stakeholders exist, this complexity can be simplified through the data platform. Standardisation to enable the streamlining of workflows and processes. Reducing life cycle times, providing confidence in the decisions being made from within an organisational data centric view of the world. So here, our focus finally turns to infrastructure. The elements that hold the physicality of what we do together. In a lot of organisations we work with, the responsibility for the OSDU implementation lands at the feet of the IIT teams, where each can be configured differently and each is as unique as the organisations themselves. Unique environments with a standardised model is this like a square peg in a round hole? Not really, but it does require some negotiation. IIT departments have a different perspective of the world and this is where the holistic relationships really start to mean something. Because up until now we've been talking about domain users and data and workflows and they come from a similar background, having similar goals and aims. But IIT departments, their aims are about providing what is needed safely and securely. If everyone's not aligned, this can and does delay and can also derail OSDU data journeys. So the need for negotiation and compromise is needed on all sides. At all stages, as the OSDU data platform itself is an evolving trajectory that we all have to adapt our environments along the way. And it's not surprising as new ways of working and adaptation and change and transformation are all big tickets within an organisational level. Now I'm sure you'll have seen a variation of this diagram before. And it's an important slide to remember as it's the journey that everyone is going through or is planning on going through. On the left we see a representation of an all too familiar scenario that will probably resonate with most people, at least in some way. All our dimensions vibrate together although any transformation through any transformation process. But as we discuss the complexities in the details I have to admit I didn't realise I was going to have to press the button so many times to get there. We'll go back again now. So in the last few years the forum has put a significant amount of effort into the development of the platform and its ability to store data. And given the breadth and depth of the industry initiatives that we all want to see coming out of the forum there is still a lot to achieve. Capitalising on existing infrastructure in order to diffuse the OSDU concept and incorporating it into new solutions, realising the benefits of the past by integrating and adopting them for solutions fit for a new data-centric future. Now I've probably not told you anything that you don't already know today. But this holistic view is what we feel everyone needs to take into account whenever they're thinking about what they want to do. It's not just about, as I say, the domain or the IT or the data. Everyone's got to collaborate together to ensure that everybody is working together to get exactly what they need. But I hope in some ways I've made you think about it in a slightly different way. And if I have then that might just help you on your journey. So I don't think I've spoken for 15 minutes. You've got three minutes there. Oh, there we go. That's not so bad. So thank you for your time today. I hope you enjoy the rest of the conference. And if there's no questions, then I can let you go for your break soon. Sooner, rather than later. Thank you.