THE CHALLENGE
Turning operational data into user-friendly information
Repsol Renewables is the global, low-carbon energy arm of Spanish oil and gas giant Repsol, with major operations in Spain, the US, Chile and Italy. It operates nearly 60 plants with over 300 wind turbines and 400 inverters, which convert a turbine’s power into grid-compatible electricity. And with each inverter alone generating around 1,000 data signals, the company handles huge volumes of raw data.
“My job is to add value to the immense amount of information we receive from each plant, each signal, and each piece of equipment, so it can be used by the company,” explains Juan Luis Vicuña, System Support Senior Consultant at Repsol Group.
A primary difficulty was allowing IT-friendly access to operational data. Specifically, Repsol needed to avoid a scenario where analysts had to use specialist operational technology (OT) tools to connect to equipment plant by plant, through isolated networks. Instead, it wanted a centralized system that would simplify data access and consumption.
“We also have a strategic roadmap to reach 7,000MW of installed capacity and potentially integrate new technologies like battery storage,” Vicuña added. “We needed a database that could scale efficiently to accommodate this growth without infrastructural bottlenecks.”
Storing every raw signal is costly, but Repsol must comply with regulatory requirements to retain information for set periods. A solution that offered efficient compression to reduce storage costs while maintaining data availability was, therefore, another key requirement.
“Different vendors, systems, and technologies force us to normalize models, so we don’t store data with inconsistent formats or semantic differences,” said Vicuña. “And in a global environment, visibility and security are also critical. Multiple network segmentations, firewall rules, and private links may increase security, but they also make daily work more complex.”
And with plants distributed across different continents, communication challenges and equipment failures also risked creating data gaps. Repsol required a cloud-based solution that ensured global connectivity and high availability through redundancy.
