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Manager, Canadian Energy Industry, Cisco Canada

Manager, Canadian Energy Industry, Cisco Canada

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 17 Dec 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

Enbridge officials no longer have to travel between Calgary and Edmonton to have face-to-face meetings. The company’s CIO says modern video technology is easier to use

Pipeline operator Enbridge Inc. of Calgary is responding to hard times by investing in video conferencing technology.

Crude oil prices have cratered and the government has warned the recession is worse than originally anticipated, but Enbridge, which distributes natural gas in most of Eastern Canada and New York, is adding to its staff of 5,700.

The company has $12 billion worth of projects under way, including a new pipeline that will connect Delavan, Wisconsin and Flanagan, Illinois. Enbridge has installed two TelePresence 3000 units from Cisco Systems Inc. is working on a third room in Superior, Wisconsin, which is on its liquids pipeline between Edmonton and Chicago.

“It’s a really very complicated endeavour to build a new pipeline,” said Enbridge’s chief information officer, Brent Poohkay. “We saw a lot of folks having to travel a lot and we were concerned about their productivity when they travel.” The conference rooms, which cost $300,000 each, have been in Calgary and Edmonton since October. Enbridge also plans to install rooms in Houston, Texas and Toronto.

Though TelePresence includes video cameras and screens, transmits video content and is designed to allow business users to confer, Cisco doesn’t like to call it video conferencing.

“There’s been years and years of bad experience around teleconferencing and utilization is less than five per cent,” said Scott Fawcett, Cisco Systems Canada Co.’s manager for the Canadian energy industry.

Oil’s gone from $147 a barrel in the spring to the mid 40s. Whenever you supply something that’s come down by a third of value, the immediate thing is how can you reduce cost and be more efficient?Scott Fawcett>Text

Poohkay is one IT manager who had bad experience with video conferencing systems in the past.

“I found as a user of those systems they were hard to use, not intuitive and pretty intimidating,” he said. “There were stability and connection difficulties that you’d see, the quality of the audio and video was inconsistent. You take a look at all of those things together and that would typically discourage use. Why would I bother? I think that’s why video conferencing failed.”

But he added manufacturers have fixed those problems.

Major telepresence vendors include Hewlett-Packard Development Co. LP, which makes the Halo system. Norwegian video vendor Tandberg SA is also in the market, with the Telepresence T3, scheduled to ship next month.


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Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.

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