IBM and SFPUC Team to Help Reduce Water Pollution in the San Francisco Bay and Pacific Ocean
Posted on: Tuesday, 23 June 2009, 13:27 CDT
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20090416/IBMLOGO )
The SFPUC, which treats an average of 80-90 million gallons of wastewater per day during dry weather and up to 370 million gallons of combined wastewater and storm runoff per day during the rainy season, is using the IBM software to develop smarter management of the city's 1,000 miles of sewer system and three treatment facilities.
Already, in the last year, the IBM software has improved the organization's ratio of preventive to corrective maintenance by approximately 11 percent, meaning that the organization has been doing more preventive and less corrective maintenance. This is how SFPUC is measured against industry standards.
The IBM Maximo Asset Management software gives the SFPUC greater visibility into their maintenance operations and physical infrastructure, with near real-time status of equipment and maintenance history. The software also integrates with the city's 311 and 28-CLEAN Customer Service systems -- dispatch centers that handle non-emergency problems, such as potholes, abandoned vehicles, loose manhole covers and overflowing storm drains.
"Using the IBM Maximo Asset Management software, problems are often solved within 24 hours," said
Along with IBM Maximo Asset Management software, the commission's Wastewater Enterprise is using ArcGIS geographic information software from IBM Business Partner ESRI to locate and measure assets spatially.
For instance, the city was able to solve a problem of missing catch basin grates -- the heavy metal grates that keep large objects from falling into storm drains. IBM Maximo Asset Management software and ArcGIS revealed that all the incidents were located within a quarter mile of a scrap metal yard.
The SFPUC infrastructure includes wastewater treatment machinery, basins and piping including huge capital investments such as large-capacity lift pumps, dewatering centrifuges, belt presses, engine generators and a complex series of huge collection boxes--large basins strategically located throughout the city that capture storm water.
IBM has developed a number of smarter water offerings under its 'Big Green Innovations' initiative, part of a
"Water management is an issue faced by every business, city and government on the planet," said
SFPUC is also using IBM Cognos(R) 8 Business Intelligence software to pinpoint and report to management about trends such as the time required to get work orders, and the ratio of preventive maintenance to corrective maintenance.
For more information on the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission, visit: www.sfwater.org/home.cfm.
To see a video on SFPUC, go to: http://www.youtube.com/user/SFPUCcommunications
More about IBM's vision to bring a new level of intelligence to how the world works--how every person, business, organization, government, natural system, and man-made system interacts, can be found at: http://www.ibm.com/press/us/en/presskit/26094.wss
For images, videos, and more information related to IBM and water, visit http://www.ibm.com/press/us/en/presskit/26906.wss.
Media Contacts: Libra White IBM Communications 1-408-404-6786 libra@us.ibm.com Tyrone Jue SFPUC Communications 1-415-554-3247 tjue@sfwater.orgSOURCE IBM
Source: PR Newswire
Related Articles
- Washington Metro Uses IBM Software to Keep Mass Transit System Safe and On Time
- Cincom Systems Joins IBM's Software as a Service Specialty
- A FileWave First: A Totally Windows-Based Version of FileWave(TM) That Brings Powerful Yet Easy-to-Use Software Management Tools to Windows System Administrators
- I.D. Systems' Wireless AvRamp Technology Selected to Manage Aircraft Ground Support Equipment at San Francisco International Airport
- IBM Software Expands SOA Capabilities on System Z Mainframe
- NHIC Ilsan Hospital Turns to IBM to Manage Medical Information Systems
- LANDesk Software Raises the Bar for Systems Management With LANDesk Management Suite 8.6
- IBM Jumps Back Into Water-Cooled Systems
- IBM Software University Conference Features Selectica's 'Next Generation' Sales Management Solutions
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds