OpenO&M Owner-Operator Leadership Council

MIMOSA is going to begin hosting the OpenO&M Owner-Operator Leadership Council. MIMOSA membership is NOT required in order to participate in this forum. The NWRP CIO, Cliff Pedersen has agreed to serve as the acting chair. Those who are interested need to self register on this website and then submit their application to this page.

OpenO&M/MIMOSA and PCA Forum

OpenO&M/MIMOSA and PCA hosted the OpenO&M/MIMOSA and PCA Forum – Americas 2011. The PCA Forum was hosted by Chevron at Chevron Office, Briar Park office in west Houston, February 22nd through Feb 24th, 2011.

The Forum featured presentations and discussion from both owner/operators and suppliers identifying key business requirements and solutions leveraging open, supplier neutral standards, with a focus on the benefits of using OpenO&M and ISO 15926 in coordinated fashion.

Key themes:

  • An integrated approach Operations and Maintenance Management incorporating Management of Change and Operational Risk Management
  • Perspectives on Sustainable Interoperability and Life-cycle Engineering
  • The roles of key standards – ISO 15926 and OpenO&M/MIMOSA usage and implementation

OstiaEdge Central Edition Monitoring Software Using OpenO&M Interoperability Standard

Engineering Software Reliability Group (ESRG), provider of leading-edge data analysis and remote monitoring technology for the US Navy and commercial industry, today announced that OstiaEdgeTM Central Edition (CE) is compatible with MIMOSA OpenO&M standards. OstiaEdgeTM CE provides onsite and remote engineers, operators, and maintenance personnel the ability to qualify data based on machine state and process condition based rules to assess and report equipment health. OstiaEdgeTM CE includes fleet level monitoring views that provide single-screen comparisons of machine-to-fleet health.

The inclusion of MIMOSA OpenO&M standards and the MIMOSA CRIS 3.2 database within the OstiaEdgeTM CE product enables simple integration with Distributed Control Systems, Computerized Maintenance Management Systems (CMMS), Reliability Software, and other enterprise software applications. This facilitates interoperability among plant systems and streamlines integration thus reducing installation cost.

Shrinking workforces and the rising cost of employees have forced many companies to reduce onsite personnel and utilize corporate locations to perform analysis historically done at the plant level. This forces the onsite staff to focus on alarming and immediate actions which can consume nearly 100% of available time. Because of this, centralized engineering analysis is more important now than ever to ensure plant reliability and availability does not suffer. Interoperability between corporate CMMS systems, and condition monitoring software is essential for providing ‘Reverse Distance Support’ capability. This enables remote personnel to support plant personnel with condition based operations and data driven maintenance decisions.

“ESRG has been incorporating MIMOSA OpenO&M standards into their government remote monitoring products in support of the US Navy since 2005, so it is with great pleasure to our organization to see that they have incorporated these standards into the OstiaEdge product line as well. As active members of the MIMOSA Technical Board, ESRG has a strong commitment to OpenO&M standards and utilizes these standards as foundations for all future products” said Alan Johnson, MIMOSA President.

About MIMOSA

MIMOSA is a not-for-profit trade association dedicated to developing and encouraging the adoption of open information standards in manufacturing, fleet, and facility environments – information standards which enable collaborative asset lifecycle management. MIMOSA members come from process and discrete manufacturing companies, facility management companies, military organizations, capital equipment OEMs, and suppliers of asset management software systems.

About ESRG

Established in 2000, ESRG provides leading-edge data analysis and remote monitoring technology for the US Navy and commercial industry. ESRG is the data analytics leader for the US Navy surface fleet remote monitoring program providing a fleet-wide service of performance reports on gas turbines, diesel engines, and balance of plant equipment. Commercial users and US Navy fleet support teams turn to ESRG for their technology and expertise in reporting, dashboards, data integration and data analysis as well as their ability to utilize in-house subject matter experts to write diagnostic and anomaly detection rules.

ESRG Media Contact

Robin Russell
Engineering Software Reliability Group
757-965-5963
moc.h1716183931cetgr1716183931se@ll1716183931essur1716183931.nibo1716183931r1716183931
www.esrgtech.com

ProcessMonitor MIMOSA real-time data integration software using the OpenO&M interoperability standard

Matrikon Inc. (TSX: MTK) the world’s largest developer of standards-based OPC software, today announced the release of ProcessMonitor™ MIMOSA. With ProcessMonitor MIMOSA, Enterprise Decisions Support Systems (DSS) can access real-time and historical data and disseminate this information for Condition Based Maintenance, Maintenance & Production Planning and other maintenance and operational tactical purposes.

ProcessMonitor MIMOSA is standards-based software, enabling interoperability between process control, maintenance management (CMMS), condition monitoring, reliability and other enterprise software systems from different vendors.

Dynamic market influences such as production commitments, energy usage contracts and pipeline capacity leases force business decisions on production targets to be taken on a daily basis. These business decisions are made at the enterprise level with little or no consideration on whether or not the plant process equipment has the capacity and availability to meet this demand, leading to production target misses or even contractual penalties. Productivity is frequently hampered by equipment breakdown, causing unplanned downtime, or simply due to poor maintenance planning. Incorporating this real-time information in the decision making process increases productivity, lowers operational and maintenance costs and increasing asset lifetime.

“I am genuinely excited about the ProcessMonitor MIMOSA product announcement from Matrikon. I see it as another tangible expression of their commitment to open standards-based interoperability. By developing products incorporating both MIMOSA and OPC Foundation standards, they are demonstrating their active support of the OpenO&M Initiative™, which enables and promotes open-standards-based interoperability in the Operations and Maintenance domain for plants, fleets and facilities” said Alan T. Johnston, MIMOSA President.

About MIMOSA

MIMOSA is a not-for-profit trade association dedicated to developing and encouraging the adoption of open information standards for Operations and Maintenance in manufacturing, fleet, and facility environments. MIMOSA’s open standards enable collaborative asset lifecycle management in both commercial and military applications. MIMOSA is composed of progressive process and discrete manufacturing corporations, facility management companies, military organizations, capital equipment OEMs, and suppliers of asset management software systems including Human-Machine Interfaces (HMI), Manufacturing Execution Systems (MES), Plant Asset Management (PAM) systems, Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), Enterprise Asset Management (EAM/CMMS) systems, Operational Data Historian Systems (ODHS), and Condition Monitoring (CM) systems.

About Matrikon

Matrikon is a leading provider of industrial intelligence solutions that enable manufacturing plants to achieve operational excellence by transforming production data into knowledge to predict and prevent problems and optimize operations. Matrikon’s customers achieve agile operations through the combination of external market and plant data to make informed, intelligent decisions in real-time. With offices in major cities throughout North America, Australia, Europe and the Middle East and a global client base including industry leaders in a wide range of process industries, Matrikon’s reach is global. For more information visit the Matrikon website

Matrikon and ProcessMonitor are trademarks or registered trademarks of Matrikon Inc.

For more information contact:

Frank Vanderham
CBM Product Manager
Matrikon Inc.
Suite 1800, 10405 Jasper Ave.
Edmonton, AB. T5J 3N4
p: 780.945.4054
f: 780.448.9191
e: *protected email*
w: www.matrikon.com

The Department of Defense mandates the use of MIMOSA Standards

MIMOSA standards were inserted as mandated standards in the Department of Defense (DoD) Information Technology Standards Registry (DISR) Baseline Release 06-1.0 on 21 February 2006.

Mandated standards are standards deemed essential for providing interoperability and net centric services across the DoD enterprise. They are the minimum set of standards for the acquisition of all DoD systems that produce, use, or exchange information and, when implemented, facilitate the flow of information to the warfighter. These standards are mandated for the management, development, and acquisition of new or improved systems throughout the DoD.

“Insertion of the MIMOSA standards into the Defense Information Standards Registry as mandated standards further supports the DoD mandate to utilize open, industry developed standards,” said Dr. William Craig, Director of the Software Engineering Directorate (SED), U.S. Army Aviation and Missile Research, Development, and Engineering Center .

The Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) performs communications, combat support computing, information assurance, joint command and control, and joint interoperability support core mission areas. These core missions provide integrated command, control, communications, and computing warfighting capabilities in support of the President, the Secretary of Defense, and other Department of Defense components in peace and at war. In support of these missions, DISA maintains the DISR.

The SED has established a MIMOSA Center of Excellence to assist DoD organizations in the implementation of the MIMOSA standards. The Center will model, describe, transfer, store, and provide query-response services for DoD MIMOSA data and information. SED personnel are also playing key roles in organizing the OpenO&M™ Military Joint Working Group, which provides a collaborative forum to help enable standards-based interoperability in the Joint Military Services.

“This is an important Milestone for MIMOSA adoption in the U. S. military services. The MIMOSA open standards enable platform and vendor neutral platform information management solutions in support of Joint Focused Logistics and I look forward to continuing collaboration with SED in the OpenO&M™ Military Working Group,” said Alan T. Johnston, MIMOSA President.

MIMOSA Recognizes Commitment by Invensys

MIMOSA, the industry trade association providing open information standards for Operations and Maintenance (O&M), is pleased to acknowledge the announcement by Invensys of its new InFusion product line. Invensys, a leading industrial automation supplier and a leader in industrial asset performance management has affirmed its commitment to the OpenO&M initiative by incorporating OpenO&M capabilities, including MIMOSA standards, into the recently introduced InFusion enterprise control system (ECS). The InFusion ECS leverages MIMOSA and other open standards organizations involved in the OpenO&M™ Initiative and is focused on achieving shop floor to enterprise integration within the manufacturing industry.

MIMOSA, a founding member and maintainer of the OpenO&M Initiative, sees this announcement as another validation of the purpose, vision and practical benefits being experienced from the initiative. Some standards organizations seek to impose the views of a single community of interest on all industry participants, while the OpenO&M Initiative seeks to harmonize standards which individually represent the best efforts from a variety of disciplines and viewpoints. Active participants include MIMOSA, OPC Foundation, ISA, WBF and OAG. Collectively, these standards enable a federated model of distributed information which can be managed in a coordinated fashion, meeting the requirements of many types of vendors, integrators and endusers of industrial systems, applications, tools and technology. This program provides an efficient model for achieving open standards-based interoperability while leveraging existing open standards, and minimizes duplicate efforts through an open, collaborative approach. Significant O&M requirements in manufacturing, fleet, and facilities management, are addressed in collaboration with major private and public sector end-users Page 2 MIMOSA Recognizes Invensys more through a series of Joint Working Groups. Membership in the OpenO&M Initiative is free and other appropriate organizations are encouraged to join and participate in this important industry activity.

According to Peter Martin, vice president of performance management at Foxboro, Mass.-based Invensys Process Systems: “Invensys is extending our current S95./B2MML and OPC functionality to include MIMOSA based connectivity. This is incorporated in products and deliverables that are currently being tested and evaluated at several key customer sites. With these new InFusion capabilities, Invensys will become the first major automation vendor to offer full OpenO&M compliance. This type of standards-based interoperability is an essential element of the InFusion enterprise control system and is widely recognized as key to achieving the agility required to compete in today’s business climate.”

Alan Johnston, MIMOSA President, commented, “I applaud the Invensys move to broadly adopt the open standards developed by the organizations participating in the OpenO&M Initiative, including the maintenance and reliability management standards developed by MIMOSA. Open standards-based interoperability is a critical enabler to efficiently span the existing information gaps, both between the shop floor and the enterprise and between interrelated sites, enterprises and industry groups. Product announcements such as this one confirm that open standards-based interoperability is no longer just an academic or corporate research topic. The OpenO&M Initiative participants open standards turn this task into a practical engineering exercise.”

About MIMOSA

MIMOSA, a non-profit organization, has worked with the maintenance and reliability management community since 1993. The MIMOSA efforts relate to physical asset management, both through developing open standards and by identifying synergies with related industry groups. MIMOSA maintains a wide range of collaborative relationships including those with OpenO&M Initiative participants, as well as with formal standards bodies such as ISO and ANSI. The Condition Based Operations (CBO) concepts that MIMOSA supports in the OpenO&M Initiative help maintenance and reliability professionals participate as a full peer partners in achieving and sustaining operational excellence. Core elements of the MIMOSA open standards support multi-site, multi-enterprise, multi-industry maintenance and reliability management, meeting the increasingly complex asset management requirements of private organizations and the public sector, including the military service branches.

About OpenO&M

The formal association of several industry standards organizations, including the OPC Foundation, the World Batch Forum (WBF), ISA, OAGi, and MIMOSA, who have agreed to work together to provide a common, harmonized set of information standards for the convenient exchange of Operations & Maintenance (O&M) data.

MIMOSA, the industry trade association providing open information standards for Operations and Maintenance (O&M), is pleased to acknowledge the announcement by Invensys of its new InFusion product line. Invensys, a leading industrial automation supplier and a leader in industrial asset performance management has affirmed its commitment to the OpenO&M initiative by incorporating OpenO&M capabilities, including MIMOSA standards, into the recently introduced InFusion enterprise control system (ECS). The InFusion ECS leverages MIMOSA and other open standards organizations involved in the OpenO&M™ Initiative and is focused on achieving shop floor to enterprise integration within the manufacturing industry.
MIMOSA, a founding member and maintainer of the OpenO&M Initiative, sees this announcement as another validation of the purpose, vision and practical benefits being experienced from the initiative. Some standards organizations seek to impose the views of a single community of interest on all industry participants, while the OpenO&M Initiative seeks to harmonize standards which individually represent the best efforts from a variety of disciplines and viewpoints. Active participants include MIMOSA, OPC Foundation, ISA, WBF and OAG. Collectively, these standards enable a federated model of distributed information which can be managed in a coordinated fashion, meeting the requirements of many types of vendors, integrators and endusers of industrial systems, applications, tools and technology. This program provides an efficient model for achieving open standards-based interoperability while leveraging existing open standards, and minimizes duplicate efforts through an open, collaborative approach. Significant O&M requirements in manufacturing, fleet, and facilities management, are addressed in collaboration with major private and public sector end-users Page 2 MIMOSA Recognizes Invensys more through a series of Joint Working Groups. Membership in the OpenO&M Initiative is free and other appropriate organizations are encouraged to join and participate in this important industry activity.
According to Peter Martin, vice president of performance management at Foxboro, Mass.-based Invensys Process Systems: “Invensys is extending our current S95./B2MML and OPC functionality to include MIMOSA based connectivity. This is incorporated in products and deliverables that are currently being tested and evaluated at several key customer sites. With these new InFusion capabilities, Invensys will become the first major automation vendor to offer full OpenO&M compliance. This type of standards-based interoperability is an essential element of the InFusion enterprise control system and is widely recognized as key to achieving the agility required to compete in today’s business climate.”
Alan Johnston, MIMOSA President, commented, “I applaud the Invensys move to broadly adopt the open standards developed by the organizations participating in the OpenO&M Initiative, including the maintenance and reliability management standards developed by MIMOSA. Open standards-based interoperability is a critical enabler to efficiently span the existing information gaps, both between the shop floor and the enterprise and between interrelated sites, enterprises and industry groups. Product announcements such as this one confirm that open standards-based interoperability is no longer just an academic or corporate research topic. The OpenO&M Initiative participants open standards turn this task into a practical engineering exercise.”
About MIMOSA
MIMOSA, a non-profit organization, has worked with the maintenance and reliability management community since 1993. The MIMOSA efforts relate to physical asset management, both through developing open standards and by identifying synergies with related industry groups. MIMOSA maintains a wide range of collaborative relationships including those with OpenO&M Initiative participants, as well as with formal standards bodies such as ISO and ANSI. The Condition Based Operations (CBO) concepts that MIMOSA supports in the OpenO&M Initiative help maintenance and reliability professionals participate as a full peer partners in achieving and sustaining operational excellence. Core elements of the MIMOSA open standards support multi-site, multi-enterprise, multi-industry maintenance and reliability management, meeting the increasingly complex asset management requirements of private organizations and the public sector, including the military service branches.
About OpenO&M
The formal association of several industry standards organizations, including the OPC Foundation, the World Batch Forum (WBF), ISA, OAGi, and MIMOSA, who have agreed to work together to provide a common, harmonized set of information standards for the convenient exchange of Operations & Maintenance (O&M) data.

Formation of the Manufacturing Interoperability Guideline Working Group Announced

The creation of the Manufacturing Interoperability Guideline Working Group, a collaborative venture of ISA, MIMOSA, OAGi, OPC, and WBF, was announced today. The Working Group is the next step in the previous announcement by the Open Applications Group and ISA-SP95 to converge their standards for manufacturing interoperability by working to support the OpenO&MTM Initiative. This group will develop an industry guideline that defines generic business process models between the operations management and business layers of the manufacturing support system.

The guideline will be applicable to process, discrete, and mixed-mode manufacturers. It will reflect a convergence of the manufacturing interoperability standards work underway within ISA SP95, OAGi, WBF, MIMOSA, and OPC. The guideline will facilitate development of reusable integration software components for processes in the form of web services in an open standard XML format.

“Many enterprises today are struggling with the myriad of standards available to them and often do not know which standards they should be using,” said David Connelly, CEO of the Open Applications Group. “Many of our OAGIS users are using both ISA-95 and OAGIS and we are excited to participate in this initiative that will simplify their efforts and provide our customers with a common solution.”

“Delivery of the ISA-95 set of standards will be greatly accelerated by the customer driven requirements of this collaboration,” said Keith Unger, of Stone Technologies and chair of the ISA-SP95 enterprise -control system integration committee. “We want to leverage our best contributors from all of these relevant efforts and provide a better standard for our customers.”

“In establishing this working group, we are pledging to collaborate in manufacturing interoperability standards development efforts and apply the resources of our respective organizations toward a common goal,” said Maurice Wilkins, Chairman of WBF.

In order to assure that the working group addresses issues that reflect market need, a Customer Advisory Council has been created. The council will be composed of representatives from end-user companies in process, discrete, and mixed-mode manufacturing. The council will collaborate and agree upon a recommended, prioritized list of business processes (scenarios) to be addressed by the working group. These business processes will be documented as simple interface data flows and prioritized by the council to provide guidance and support to the working group. The council will identify industry specific needs and business scenarios with areas of overlap across industries. The group will work to classify the underlying technologies to support deployment of standards based software components as Web Services. It will also explore interoperability standards and guidelines and software deployment strategies to ensure a viable and unified market opportunity is available to the software suppliers.

“Broad based support is needed among manufacturing customer organizations to support standards development and deployment activities,” said Gary Sullivan of BWXT and chair of the customer advisory council. “The success of this effort and future development of standards based software components is dependent upon demonstrating a strong market need and customer commitment.”

“This end user customer guidance and support is critical, because it can lead to suppliers implementing the guideline in the form of a commercial product,” said Greg Gorbach, Vice President, ARC Advisory Group, who facilitated the creation of the customer council. “It is also important that the working group leverage the customer advisory council to establish appropriate linkages with vertical industry groups so that the initiative reaches broad industry segments.”

At this time, ISA, MIMOSA, OAGi, OPC, and WBF are the principal member organizations of the working group. The initial guideline will be reflect convergence of the work of ISA, OAGi, and WBF and will be the basis for future alignment with the OPC Unified Architecture model, the MIMOSA open systems architecture, and the PackML work of OMAC.

“We look forward to contributing to the work of this group to help enable standards-based interoperability for operations and maintenance related applications, including the ultimate alignment with our work on open system architectures for enterprise application integration,” said MIMOSA President Alan Johnston. Tom Burke, OPC Foundation President, added, “This working group epitomizes our mission of ensuring interoperability in automation by creating and maintaining open specifications.”

The Working Group will meet initially in April, and is striving to issue interim schemas in 2006 and the guideline by mid-2007. The completed guideline will be jointly copyrighted by the member organizations, but will be made available for public use royalty free.

About MIMOSA

MIMOSA, a non-profit organization, has worked with the maintenance and reliability management community since 1993. The MIMOSA efforts relate to physical asset management, both through developing open standards and by identifying synergies with related industry groups. MIMOSA maintains a wide range of collaborative relationships including those with OpenO&M Initiative participants, as well as with formal standards bodies such as ISO and ANSI. The Condition Based Operations (CBO) concepts that MIMOSA supports in the OpenO&M Initiative help maintenance and reliability professionals participate as a full peer partners in achieving and sustaining operational excellence. Core elements of the MIMOSA open standards support multi-site, multi-enterprise, multi-industry maintenance and reliability management, meeting the increasingly complex asset management requirements of private organizations and the public sector, including the military service branches.

About OpenO&M

The formal association of several industry standards organizations, including the OPC Foundation, the World Batch Forum (WBF), ISA, OAGi, and MIMOSA, who have agreed to work together to provide a common, harmonized set of information standards for the convenient exchange of Operations & Maintenance (O&M) data.

Joint Working Group White Paper Discusses Condition Based Operations for Manufacturing

The OpenO&M™ For Manufacturing Joint Working Group announce a collaborative publication entitled Condition Based Operations For Manufacturing. The paper defines their shared vision for Condition Based Operations (CBO). In manufacturing, CBO enables operational planning and scheduling to be accomplished in conjunction with a forecast of actual availability and capability of assets in the critical path. This enables production planners and operations staff to establish economically optimal production plans, empowering them to directly contribute to the economic goals of the enterprise.


The OpenO&M For Manufacturing Joint Working Group, formed by the Instrumentation Systems and Automation Society (ISA), MIMOSA (An Operations and Maintenance Open Systems Alliance) and OPC Foundation (OPC) announced its formation at ISA EXPO 2003. The mission of the joint working group is to enable open and interoperable O&M solutions spanning from the factory floor through the enterprise. The OpenO&M For Manufacturing Joint Working Group will harmonize standards from participating organizations enabling practical interoperability amongst the many required devices, tools and systems in a vendor, product and platform neutral basis.


While the Joint Working Group anticipates a broad range of valuable by-products from the collaboration, this initial white paper focuses on CBO for manufacturing that requires the effective integration of a broad variety of O&M information. The human analogy is the need to know the health prognosis of specific individuals, not just averages for humans of a similar age. A human that is considered to be in the critical path for many important activities will normally have comprehensive and continuous efforts to monitor their health, prognoses it and risk manage it through a variety of forms of insurance, redundancies or other compensating strategies that are now taken for granted. CBO enables a similar discipline for critical path assets in all types of asset intensive applications including manufacturing. It requires the near real-time fusion of large amounts of data, information and knowledge from a wide variety of dissimilar multivendor systems. This type of complex and dynamic systems integration is best facilitated through the use of open information standards such as those being harmonized by the OpenO&M For Manufacturing Joint Working Group.


Keith Unger, ISA SP95 Committee Chair said: “I am extremely pleased that this collaborative effort has finished the first deliverable. The SP95 committee is just beginning its work on Part 4 of the ANSI/ISA S95 standard and I expect the SP95 committee will be able to build on the OpenO&M™ initiative and complete the standard effort much more quickly then we would have by working alone.”


Thomas Burke, OPC Foundation President and Executive Director said: “The OPC Foundation is excited to be part of this joint working group. OPC is the process industry open standard for accessing real-time plant floor information from a wide variety of measurement and control systems. This collaboration is key to delivering seamless integration of operations and asset management information from the plant across the enterprise.”


Alan Johnston, MIMOSA President said: “I am excited to see this first deliverable expressing a joint vision for CBO in manufacturing, but I am even more pleased to see the associated standards harmonization work that will enable the development of CBO and other O&M solutions based on our open information standards. The collaborative development of reference implementation models leveraging our harmonized standards is a key step in the process of establishing systems that provide more effective enterprise integration spanning from the factory floor to the boardroom.”

Joint Working Group to Promote Open Enterprise Integation Standards for Operations and Maintenance Holds Formative Meeting

The Instrumentation Systems and Automation Society (ISA) SP95 Committee, MIMOSA (An Operations and Maintenance Open Systems Alliance) and OPC Foundation (OPC) held the initial meeting of their Joint Working Group (JWG). The objective is to simplify the development and integration of Operations & Maintenance (O&M) systems, equipment and software enabling practical interoperability with each other and with other enterprise systems. In support of this objective, the JWG will provide coordination for the standards under development by ISA SP95, MIMOSA and OPC.

The three organizations originally announced their intent to form a JWG in a press release from the ISA EXPO 2003 on October 22, 2003. In addition to establishing the organizational structure and protocols for the JWG, the group developed a technical strategy including objectives and deliverables.

Keith Unger, ISA SP95 Committee Chair said: “I am amazed at the energy and enthusiasm generated during this initial meeting. The group was able to outline common goals and establish a base of understanding on how these standards will collaborate. The integrated efforts of all three organizations will result in vendors building products for superior open solutions addressing the needs of all of manufacturing.”

OPC Foundation President Tom Burke said: “I am very excited about the collaboration and team work that was demonstrated at the OPC/MIMOSA/ISA SP95 JWG Meeting. The team is composed of vendors from each of the respective organizations. The team quickly came to consensus on a strategy for interoperability. We are rapidly unifying the terminology and models and we will be providing the documents and sample code to jump-start the vendors” adoption of the standards. The JWG is focused on enabling vendors to build products that end-users will be able to deploy into open solutions for Operations, Maintenance & Beyond.

Alan Johnston, MIMOSA President said: “I am extremely pleased by the amount of progress we made at the first JWG Meeting. Too frequently, organizations talk about collaboration, but fail to deliver useful and timely results, either by design or by default. We are already seeing significant benefits from our continuing collaboration with OPC to enable the real-time enterprise in a variety of vertical industry sectors through our OpenO&M™ initiative. Collaborating with the ISA SP95 Committee in our new JWG is the obvious way to accelerate the development and adoption of open standards applicable to the manufacturing sector.”

Costantino Pipero, Manager, Global Solutions Invensys and the JWG Coordinator said: “We are doing this right when the technology is mature enough to address a screaming market demand for consistency: demand from the users to bridge their operational islands, and demand from the solutions providers to define and pinpoint customers’ requirements. And we want to do it fast.”

The Instrumentation Systems and Automation Society (ISA) SP95 Committee, MIMOSA (An Operations and Maintenance Open Systems Alliance) and OPC Foundation (OPC) held the initial meeting of their Joint Working Group (JWG). The objective is to simplify the development and integration of Operations & Maintenance (O&M) systems, equipment and software enabling practical interoperability with each other and with other enterprise systems. In support of this objective, the JWG will provide coordination for the standards under development by ISA SP95, MIMOSA and OPC.
The three organizations originally announced their intent to form a JWG in a press release from the ISA EXPO 2003 on October 22, 2003. In addition to establishing the organizational structure and protocols for the JWG, the group developed a technical strategy including objectives and deliverables.
Keith Unger, ISA SP95 Committee Chair said: “I am amazed at the energy and enthusiasm generated during this initial meeting. The group was able to outline common goals and establish a base of understanding on how these standards will collaborate. The integrated efforts of all three organizations will result in vendors building products for superior open solutions addressing the needs of all of manufacturing.”
OPC Foundation President Tom Burke said: “I am very excited about the collaboration and team work that was demonstrated at the OPC/MIMOSA/ISA SP95 JWG Meeting. The team is composed of vendors from each of the respective organizations. The team quickly came to consensus on a strategy for interoperability. We are rapidly unifying the terminology and models and we will be providing the documents and sample code to jump-start the vendors” adoption of the standards. The JWG is focused on enabling vendors to build products that end-users will be able to deploy into open solutions for Operations, Maintenance & Beyond.
Alan Johnston, MIMOSA President said: “I am extremely pleased by the amount of progress we made at the first JWG Meeting. Too frequently, organizations talk about collaboration, but fail to deliver useful and timely results, either by design or by default. We are already seeing significant benefits from our continuing collaboration with OPC to enable the real-time enterprise in a variety of vertical industry sectors through our OpenO&M™ initiative. Collaborating with the ISA SP95 Committee in our new JWG is the obvious way to accelerate the development and adoption of open standards applicable to the manufacturing sector.”
Costantino Pipero, Manager, Global Solutions Invensys and the JWG Coordinator said: “We are doing this right when the technology is mature enough to address a screaming market demand for consistency: demand from the users to bridge their operational islands, and demand from the solutions providers to define and pinpoint customers’ requirements. And we want to do it fast.”

Joint Working Group Boosts Open Enterprise Integration Standards for Operations and Maintenance Applications

The Instrumentation Systems and Automation Society (ISA), MIMOSA (An Operations and Maintenance Open Systems Alliance) and OPC Foundation (OPC) announce a significant new collaboration to develop interoperable open solutions spanning from the factory floor through the enterprise.

The three organizations have agreed to establish a Joint Working Group tasked with determining how to co-ordinate their various standards development efforts. The objective is to simplify the development of interoperable Operations & Maintenance (O&M) systems, equipment and software incorporating productized integration with each other and with other enterprise systems. Open integration requirements for applications such as Manufacturing Execution Systems, Operations Data Historians, Human Machine Interfaces, Enterprise Resource Planning, Enterprise Asset Management and Condition Based Maintenance will be addressed by the effort. Manufacturers, integrators and end-users of such systems are all expected to benefit from this collaboration.

Until now, the three organizations have been working independently to help establish consensus-driven standards with some informal interaction between their various members. Recently, OPC and MIMOSA formalized their collaboration, resulting in this week’s OpenO&M industry initiative being demonstrated for the first time at ISA EXPO 2003 in the OPC foundation booth.

The collaboration will help vendors to successfully use the existing standards of MIMOSA, ISA and OPC to build more comprehensive interoperable products. The joint working group will also establish a basis for coordinating on-going and future standards development efforts, enabling end-users to build systems that exchange data transformed into “information” between the factory floor and the enterprise. MIMOSA and ISA SP95 define information and process models for information flow, essentially defining the “what”, while OPC defines the “how” to move the data and information.

Keith Unger, ISA SP95 Committee Chair said: “Establishing this collaborative effort will help suppliers and end users by reducing the time it takes to establish open standards in integration between operations, maintenance and the overall enterprise. I look forward to working with OPC and MIMOSA to rapidly establish an effective and open integration standard.”

OPC Foundation President Tom Burke said: “We’ve come a long way since OPC was just a way for HMI to see into someone else’s system. Today, not only do we have OPC solutions for just about any automation application, but we’ve moved into services-based connectivity founded on our unified architecture. Our latest XML-enabled solutions allow equipment and systems to be monitored over the Internet as information rather than raw data, facilitating easier Operations and Maintenance Management across the global environment. We can provide the ‘how’ for this increasingly sophisticated marketplace in support of the ‘what’ being defined by MIMOSA and ISA SP95.”

Alan Johnston, MIMOSA President said: “I am really excited about this opportunity to improve the standards development process for our industry. While there are many separate groups seeking to establish standards, I believe collaboration is the key to being effective. By working together, I believe our three organizations can help each other to develop and propagate more useful consensus standards that will interoperate by design.”

The Instrumentation Systems and Automation Society (ISA), MIMOSA (An Operations and Maintenance Open Systems Alliance) and OPC Foundation (OPC) announce a significant new collaboration to develop interoperable open solutions spanning from the factory floor through the enterprise.
The three organizations have agreed to establish a Joint Working Group tasked with determining how to co-ordinate their various standards development efforts. The objective is to simplify the development of interoperable Operations & Maintenance (O&M) systems, equipment and software incorporating productized integration with each other and with other enterprise systems. Open integration requirements for applications such as Manufacturing Execution Systems, Operations Data Historians, Human Machine Interfaces, Enterprise Resource Planning, Enterprise Asset Management and Condition Based Maintenance will be addressed by the effort. Manufacturers, integrators and end-users of such systems are all expected to benefit from this collaboration.
Until now, the three organizations have been working independently to help establish consensus-driven standards with some informal interaction between their various members. Recently, OPC and MIMOSA formalized their collaboration, resulting in this week’s OpenO&M industry initiative being demonstrated for the first time at ISA EXPO 2003 in the OPC foundation booth.
The collaboration will help vendors to successfully use the existing standards of MIMOSA, ISA and OPC to build more comprehensive interoperable products. The joint working group will also establish a basis for coordinating on-going and future standards development efforts, enabling end-users to build systems that exchange data transformed into “information” between the factory floor and the enterprise. MIMOSA and ISA SP95 define information and process models for information flow, essentially defining the “what”, while OPC defines the “how” to move the data and information.
Keith Unger, ISA SP95 Committee Chair said: “Establishing this collaborative effort will help suppliers and end users by reducing the time it takes to establish open standards in integration between operations, maintenance and the overall enterprise. I look forward to working with OPC and MIMOSA to rapidly establish an effective and open integration standard.”
OPC Foundation President Tom Burke said: “We’ve come a long way since OPC was just a way for HMI to see into someone else’s system. Today, not only do we have OPC solutions for just about any automation application, but we’ve moved into services-based connectivity founded on our unified architecture. Our latest XML-enabled solutions allow equipment and systems to be monitored over the Internet as information rather than raw data, facilitating easier Operations and Maintenance Management across the global environment. We can provide the ‘how’ for this increasingly sophisticated marketplace in support of the ‘what’ being defined by MIMOSA and ISA SP95.”
Alan Johnston, MIMOSA President said: “I am really excited about this opportunity to improve the standards development process for our industry. While there are many separate groups seeking to establish standards, I believe collaboration is the key to being effective. By working together, I believe our three organizations can help each other to develop and propagate more useful consensus standards that will interoperate by design.”

MIMOSA is a member of both the OpenO&M and the Standards Leadership Council.

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