Petrolsoft Corporation

Petrolsoft Corporation (1989–2000) was a supply chain management software company with a focus on the petroleum industry. Petrolsoft Corporation was founded at Stanford University in 1989 by Bill Miller and David Gamboa as Petrolsoft Software Group. It was later incorporated in 1992. Petrolsoft introduced demand-driven inventory management to the petroleum industry.

Petrolsoft Corporation
Distribution software
IndustryPetroleum
FateAcquired by Aspen Technology
Founded1989
FounderBill Miller and David Gamboa
Defunct2000
HeadquartersSan Diego, California
Area served
Worldwide

History

The initial idea for Petrolsoft's inventory management product came from founder David Gamboa family's cash flow problems at their chain of retail gasoline stations. Mr. Miller's analysis showed that it was being caused by an inventory imbalance of gasoline stocks. When they approached Chevron with their solution, they discovered this was more than just a family problem, rather an industry-wide problem.[1] The software solution to this problem became Petrolsoft's initial product, based on inventory proportionality.

Gordon Hartogensis, a Stanford computer science graduate, joined the company in 1993 as the third partner to lead product development. Petrolsoft's products grew to include sales forecasting, inventory management, demand aggregation, remote inventory and sales reporting, and transportation optimization for the downstream petroleum supply chain and other bulk liquid supply chains.[2]

Technology

Tank trucks in the oil industry are typically divided internally into 3 to 6 compartments of various sizes. Service stations typically sell three or four different grades of motor fuel. Each delivered grade of motor fuel must have a dedicated underground storage tank. For example, a four compartment truck bringing up to four different products can be filled in 256 (44) different ways. Petrolsoft’s technology would choose the optimal way to restore inventory proportionality to the station based on its forecasts of sales by product grade.[3]

The technology would accurately forecast hourly demand for each grade of motor fuel at each service station, enabling it to determine when the first product would run out, the amounts of other products that would be left at that time, and when the optimal load chosen would fit in the underground storage tanks. The period of time from the forecasted time of fitting in the tanks to the point of product run out was called the “delivery window”. The delivery window represented the delivery flexibility of when the load could arrive at the service station so that it would fit in the tanks, and arrive prior to first product run out.[4]

Based on all of the delivery windows for all of the forecasted deliveries for all of the stations in an oil company’s directly supplied service station network, Petrolsoft’s technology would optimize the distribution of motor fuel by scheduling fleets of tank trucks to meet the demand across the distribution network. This optimal automation of the replenishment process led to lower average inventories, better utilization of tank truck fleets, lower overall distribution costs, and reduced manpower requirements. This type of time-based demand-balanced replenishment (just-in-time) was extended up the supply chain from the filling stations to the bulk terminals, where finished product was stored and then to the refinery where the product was made from crude oil feedstocks.[5]

Influence

Initial customers for the product included Sunoco, ARCO,[6] Mobil,[2] Exxon,[7][8][9] and Tosco,[10] expanding to many of the major oil companies in the United States,[11] and eventually world-wide at companies such as YPF (Argentina) and Ampol (Australia). Petrolsoft grew quickly, eventually making the Inc. 500 list of America's fastest growing private companies in both 1998 and 1999.[12] By this time, Petrolsoft had about 50 specialized employees working in three global offices: San Diego, London[13][14] and Singapore and had released multi-lingual versions of their software for use worldwide.[15] In September 2000, following an extended sales effort, on-site pilot program and the acquisition of Petrolsoft by Aspen Technology, Chevron [16] became one of the largest US customers. The Chevron contract was executed on September 30, 2000 and announced on November 16, 2000. In May 2001, Petro-Canada[17] became the largest Canadian customer, utilizing the software to manage the majority of their company-owned sites located in Ontario and Quebec. In 2003, Petro-Canada extended the solution nationwide.[18] Irving Oil became the next largest Canadian customer, also executing a contract in 2001. Savings for these companies as a result of using Petrolsoft's solutions was in the millions of dollars each year.[2]

Prior to the implementation of Petrolsoft's technology, the petroleum industry functioned as a "push" manufacturing system. That is, product was manufactured based on current market prices without regard to actual branded demand. Once Petrolsoft's demand forecasting based inventory management system was implemented, oil companies were able to track and aggregate demand from their end customers on a real time basis. This allowed them to optimize transportation resources such as tank trucks and pipelines, and to inform how much of their daily demand was constant branded demand versus spot price-driven demand. This real-time information flow changed the way the downstream petroleum industry operated and increased profitability across all adopters. Additionally, the technology prevented service stations from running out of gasoline, lowered inventory carrying costs, and lowered the cost per gallon delivered to the customer.[4]

Acquisition

On June 1, 2000, Petrolsoft Corporation was acquired by Aspen Technology, Inc. (AZPN), a public software company focused on the process manufacturing software space in an all-stock transaction valued at approximately $60 million at the time of acquisition.[19][20][21] Over a several month period, Petrolsoft's Supply Retail software suite was integrated with Aspen Technology's PIMS crude selection and refinery operations planning and execution software.[22] Petrolsoft's suite of supply chain management tools completed Aspen's fully integrated petroleum offering from the sourcing of crude oil, through the manufacturing process, and down to the end customer putting gasoline into their vehicle.[23]

gollark: Wrong.
gollark: I'm sure it's 3 ethical to use it for testing simple GPU compute things.
gollark: Again, Turing-complete.
gollark: You have 581as to learn.
gollark: Is it *really* software if it isn't GPU-accelerated?

See also

References

  1. "Pump and Circumstance", Inc.com, October 15, 1998, retrieved March 15, 2010
  2. "Petrolsoft's Mobil Inventory Management System (MIMS)", Inventory Management, retrieved March 31, 2010
  3. "Petrolsoft Supply", Petrolsoft Corporation Marketing Literature, 1998
  4. Louw, Johannes Jacobus (October 2006), Advanced Supply Chain Planning Processes and Decision Support Systems for Large-Scale Petrochemical Companies (PDF), archived from the original (PDF) on April 2, 2010, retrieved March 25, 2010
  5. >"Petrolsoft Introduces Wholesale Supply-Chain Planning Solution for Refinery-to-Terminal Distribution", Business Wire, August 2, 1999, retrieved 2010-03-29
  6. "ARCO Products Chooses Petrolsoft to Manage High-Volume Gasoline and Diesel Supply Chain", Business Wire, December 16, 1998, retrieved March 15, 2010
  7. "Petrolsoft selected by Exxon to manage supply chain". National Petroleum News. 91 (4): 10. April 1999.
  8. Logistics Management - Doing Business Archived 2011-07-26 at the Wayback Machine
  9. "Petrolsoft Selected by Exxon USA to Manage Petroleum Supply Chain", Business Wire, March 1, 1999, retrieved March 15, 2010
  10. "TOSCO Chooses Petrolsoft Corporation to Manage DiverseSupply Chain; Petrolsoft's Proven...", Business Wire, October 12, 1998, retrieved March 15, 2010
  11. "Petrolsoft Corporation Chosen to Manage Amoco's Supply Chain", Business Wire, August 10, 1998, retrieved March 15, 2010
  12. "Inc. 500 List 1999 Company Profile", Inc.com
  13. Petrolsoft Will Open London Office April 15 to Serve Petroleum Industry in U.K., Continent, Middle East
  14. Left, Sarah (April 12, 1999), "Petrolsoft opens London office", Silicon.com, retrieved March 16, 2010
  15. "New Multilingual Capabilities in Petrolsoft's Supply-Chain Management Software Facilitate Unified Global Solution". Business Wire. May 24, 1999. Retrieved March 25, 2010.
  16. "Chevron Licenses Aspen Technology's Web-Enabled Solution to Manage its Retail Supply Chain.", Business Wire, November 16, 2000, retrieved February 28, 2011
  17. "Petro-Canada Streamlines Fuel Distribution with Aspen Technology's e-Business Supply Chain Solution.", Business Wire, May 15, 2001, retrieved February 28, 2011
  18. "Petro-Canada Standardizes on AspenTech's Aspen Retail Solution to Optimize Secondary Distribution of its Petroleum Products.", Business Wire, May 23, 2003, retrieved February 28, 2011
  19. "COMPANY NEWS; ASPEN ACQUIRES ANOTHER PETROLEUM SOFTWARE COMPANY", New York Times, June 2, 2000, retrieved March 25, 2010
  20. "Aspen Technology 2000 financial statement". Archived from the original on 2007-04-02. Retrieved 2010-03-15.
  21. "AspenTech 2002 Financial Report" (PDF). AspenTech.com. August 13, 2002. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2004-09-13. Retrieved 2010-03-17.
  22. McVey, S. (June 11, 2000), "AspenTech Completes Another Piece of the Refining Puzzle With Petrolsoft", TEC Newsletter, retrieved 2010-03-30 (free registration required)
  23. Ferrari, Bob (June 6, 2000), "Aspen Technology Acquires Petrolsoft", AMR Research, retrieved 2010-03-30

Further reading

  • Crama, et al.; A Discussion of Production Planning Approaches in the Process Industry CORE Discussion Paper, 2001.
  • Ronen, David, Dispatching Petroleum Products Operations Research, May-Jun. 1995, vol. 43, No. 3, pp. 379–387.
  • Lason, Leon S. et al., Survey of Nonlinear Programming Applications Operations Research, Sep.-Oct. 1980, pp. 1029–1073.
  • Enterprise Profit Management for the Chemical Value Chain Accenture, Dec. 6, 2001.
  • Korzeniowski, Paul et al., Trading Exchanges Have the ‘Big mo’, But Users Should Proceed with Caution SupplyChainBrain.com, Jun. 2000.
  • Fransoo, Jan Cornelis, Production control and demand management in capacitated flow process industries Technishe Universiteit Eindhoven, 1993, AAT C320771, Abstract.
  • Petroleum Refinery Planning and Optimization Using Linear Programming Jan. 31, 2007.
  • OSHA Technical Manual—Petroleum Refining Processes Section IV: Chapter 2
  • Supply chain technology Hydrocarbon Processing, vol. 80, No. 9, Sep. 2001.
  • Weitzel, Dale, How to manage your refining supply chain from E-to-E World Refining, vol. 10, No. 10, Dec. 31, 2000.
  • Supply chain technology (refining), Hydrocarbon Processing, vol. 80, No. 9, Sep. 2001.
  • Dempster Mah et al., Planning Logistics Operations in the Oil Industry Journal of the Operational Research Society, 2000, pp. 1271–1288.
  • Escudero, L.F. et al., CORO, a modeling an alogrithmic framework for oil supply, transformation and distribution optimization under uncertainty, European Journal of Operational Research, Vo. 114, 1999, pp. 638–656.
  • Loos, P. et al., Application of Production Planning and Scheduling in the Process Industries Computers in Industry, vol. 36, 1998, pp. 199–208.
  • Bolander, S. et al., System framework for process flow industries Production & Inventory Management Journal, vol. 34, No. 4, 1993.
  • So what does make MRP II software suitable for process industries? Control and Instrumentation, Oct. 1991.
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