Siemens and Bentley Expand Collaboration Relationship

April 9, 2013
Targeting increased interoperability between the Comos OpenPlant 2D/3D
NUREMBERG, Germany -- The Siemens Industry Automation Division and Bentley Systems have announced at the Hannover Messe that they are stepping up their strategic collaboration, focusing on the process industry sector in fields such as chemicals, energy, pharmaceuticals, and oil and gas. Both companies are targeting increased interoperability between the Comos engineering software solution from Siemens and Bentley's OpenPlant 2D/3D system for plant design and construction.One of the aims envisaged by the collaboration is for both companies to work jointly on a system that will allow the capture, exchange and further utilization of data and information spanning the entire plant lifecycle, from engineering through to plant operations across all disciplines. Along with a cohesive connection between Comos and OpenPlant, this collaboration also seeks to afford users access to supplementary disciplines supported by the Bentley portfolio such as heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC), construction simulation, cable and raceway management, conveying technology, steel construction and laser scanning."By increasing the interoperability of our fully integrated 2D engineering software solution Comos with Bentley's open 3D system OpenPlant, we will be generating exciting new potential for users, based on the global standard ISO 15926 and iRING," explained Andreas Geiss, Vice President of Comos Industry Solutions, Siemens. "This will benefit both plant engineering and operation."Comos provides industry-specific solution concepts spanning the entire plant lifecycle on a standardized, object-oriented data platform. Comos' bidirectional data exchange between graphics and database prevents inconsistencies and provides the guarantee of an up-to-date, as-built depiction of the plant at all times.The interoperability between Comos and OpenPlant extends the scope of these benefits to now span plant design, engineering, procurement and construction."This breakthrough is a validation of our organizations' interoperability strategies and a great return on Bentley's investment in ISO 15926 and iRING. It brings our joint users information mobility across CAPEX and OPEX – that is, from design and construction through operations and maintenance," said Ken Adamson, Bentley Vice President, Building, Electrical, and Plant Products. Monica Schnitger, principal analyst at Schnitger Corporation, said, "We've long believed that much of the value created in the design and engineering process is lost in the handover to operations. By using the ISO 15926-compliant i-model to connect OpenPlant and Comos, Bentley and Siemens are coupling 2D and 3D, the conceptual design of a process through to the controlling instrumentation of an operating plant. This project, an extension of a collaboration announced last year for the discrete manufacturing industries, promises to deliver significant benefit to EPCs and plant operators in the process industries. It's an exciting development and we'll be watching with interest to see industry adoption."