Developing a success framework for digital twins

Utilities are increasingly looking to digital twins as a way of tackling many of the customer, net zero, regulatory and operational challenges they face. What lessons can be learnt from sectors that are already using this technology?

In a post Covid-19 world, energy and utility organisations are now embracing bleeding edge technologies to tackle the customer, net zero, regulatory and operational challenges they are facing. Many utility organisations have started to seriously explore a concept which can help them to narrow the gap between where they are today with their strategy and what they need to achieve in the future. This concept is digital twin.

What is a digital twin?

In its simplest form, it is a virtual replica of a real-world entity, such as an asset, person or process. The digital twin can develop in terms of scale and sophistication to deliver increasing levels of business-driven benefits and societal values.

The key for a digital twin is to integrate many data sources across the lifecycle of a product, asset and customer to understand it/them, deliver efficiencies and to gain insights to design better products and services.

As the former chief executive of Cambridge City Council, Andrew Grant, said: “A digital twin approach allows you to be the manager of the situation, not be managed by the situation, by things you didn’t expect, or even look for.”

For utilities, the digital twin is imperative in connecting customer, service, and assets to deliver benefits which:

What are the major hurdles and what have we learned?

Sopra Steria’s 20+ years’ experience in building digital twins comes from programmes delivered in Transport and Aerospace, where positive results include reducing the time to market for commissioning new planes, and improvements in supply chain management.  We are also developing the Skywise platform with Airbus and other suppliers, which is a first of a kind for the aviation industry, connecting digital assets of operations and their customers to drive efficiency and to understand previously unknown, “invaluable insights”.

What lessons can utility organisations learn from aviation, transport and manufacturing around digital twins, particularly in the initiation stage?

Digital twins potentially hold a lot of promise in helping the utilities sector overcome its most pressing challenges. It should be clear that those utility organisations who start building digital twins of their assets today will be the ones that push the industry boundaries towards a more agile and intelligent future.

But before the future can be built the right digital twin platform needs to be put in place and this needs to be a collaborative exercise between those within the utilities industry and those with experience and expertise from outside it as well.