Oracle Utilities Customers & Partners
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Oracle IT Utilities Industry helps customers ... Customers of IT Utilities Industry include ...
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Erdgas Südsachsen supplies natural gas to more than 150,000 residential and business customers in the South Saxony region of Germany. Established in 1991, the company manages more than 6,100 kilometers of gas piping and nearly 112,000 household connections. Erdgas Südsachsen is jointly owned by a local public energy authority and the large German energy group, Thüga AG. | |
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Norsk Hydro ASA is Norway’s second largest company, with operations including energy oil, gas, and aluminum production. A Fortune 500 company with 36,000 employees and offices in nearly 40 countries, it is a leading producer of oil and gas and the world’s third largest integrated producer of aluminum. | |
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A unique solution developed by HP Hungary for the national power grid operator MAVIR is helping to reduce the cost of electricity to consumers in Hungary.
MAVIR Hungarian Transmission System Operator Company Ltd (MAVIR), which is owned by a government holding company, sources electricity from now largely privatised power stations, although a few are still in the hands of MAVIR’s parent company. The electricity is distributed to consumers throughout the county via the national grid which MAVIR owns, operates and maintains. | |
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Until 2001, Nuon was one of three regulated regional suppliers of energy in The Netherlands. Then, the Dutch market was opened to domestic and foreign competition, starting with large business customers consuming more than one gigawatt of electricity. Nuon recognized that it had to transform itself into a customer-centric business—and fast—focused on more effective sales and marketing and highly responsive service. | |
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Part of E.ON, the world’s largest private-sector power and gas energy company, Powergen is one of the United Kingdom’s largest energy suppliers, with around 6 million electricity and gas customers. | |
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Orkuveita Reykjavíkur, also known as Reykjavik Energy, is an independent service company owned by the city of Reykjavik, the town of Akranes, and the local authorities of Borgarbyggð and Borgarfjarðarsveit. Within its service area, Reykjavik Energy distributes electricity, geothermal water for heating, cold water for consumption, fire fighting, and data through fiber optic based IT utility-supporting triple play services (internet, TV, and phone). More than half of Iceland’s population resides in the company’s service area. | |
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Romande Energie supplies electricity to 300,000 citizens across 321 communities in the cantons of Vaud and Valais in French-speaking Switzerland. The product of a merger between two smaller utilities, the company had developed inefficient working processes due to the continued use of the two former companies’ disparate legacy systems. It needed to become more efficient in anticipation of the deregulation of the Swiss power supply market, which would bring it into competition with other utilities. | |
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Scottish Water provides water and wastewater services to 2.2 million households and 130,000 businesses across an area that covers one third of Britain. A publicly owned organization, Scottish Water aims to be as efficient as private sector companies. | |
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Created in 1957 by the French Ministry of Agriculture, the Société du Canal de Provence et d’Aménagement de la Région Provençale (SCP) is responsible for the hydraulic development of the Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur region. A major player in the economic development of this region, SCP is the water supplier for approximately 3 million inhabitants, 500 enterprises, 6,000 farms, 40,000 individuals in a suburban area, and 1,000 fire hydrants. The company also manages 571 kilometers of underground waterways and open conduits and 5,000 kilometers of supply and distribution lines. | |
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