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What is the OPC Foundation?

OPC Foundation: The Interoperability Standard for Industrial Automation & Other Related Domains  

The OPC Foundation is dedicated to ensuring interoperability in automation by creating and maintaining open specifications that standardize the communication of acquired process data, alarm and event records, historical data, and batch data to multi-vendor enterprise systems and between production devices. Production devices include sensors, instruments, PLCs, RTUs, DCSs, HMIs, historians, trending subsystems, alarm subsystems, and more as used in the process industry, manufacturing, and in acquiring and transporting oil, gas, and minerals.

The Vision of the OPC Foundation is to provide the best technology, specifications, certification and processes to enable companies to build products and services that demonstrate multiplatform multi-vendor secure reliable interoperability.  OPC Foundation members benefit by being able to take advantage of the technology and marketing necessary to become the leaders in the industry supporting industrial standards for industrial automation and beyond.

Read through the section below or jump to History, Vision, Organization, Board of Directors, Officers, Marketing Committee, Technical Advisory Council, Technical Working Groups, Regional Organizations, OPC Foundation Presidential Offices or Administrative offices.

History

The Foundation currently has 427 members from around the world, including nearly all of the world's major providers of control systems, instrumentation, and process control systems. The OPC Foundation's forerunner - a task force composed of Fisher-Rosemount, Rockwell Software, Opto 22, Intellution, and Intuitive Technology - was able to develop a basic, workable, OPC specification after only a single year's work. A simplified, stage-one solution was released in August 1996.    The members of the task force included the legendary people: Al Chisholm, David Rehbein, Thomas Burke, Neil Petersen, Paul VanSlette, Phil White, Rich Malina, Rich Harrison, Tom Quinn. These guys all worked for companies that were competitors of each other,  but they all quickly established great friendships and great relationships and focused at the task of developing this specification that was built on solid technology for interoperability.   Sample code came first,  then the specification essentially documented the sample code.   The OPC task force made sure that everything was feasible and exceeded the expectations of all of the vendors to eliminate any excuses about adoption and building real products.  This was not an academic exercise in futility; this was about developing technology that multiple vendors would quickly adopt in the interest of multi-vendor interoperability.

The OPC Foundation has been able to work more quickly than many other standards groups because OPC Foundation is building on existing, computer industry standards. Other groups which have had to define standards "from the ground up" have had a more difficult time reaching consensus as a result of the scope of their work.

OPC started as a vendor driven initiative to solve the simple device driver problem,  where the first-tier visualization and SCADA applications needed to have a standard way for reading and writing data from devices on the factory floor and DCS systems in process control.  The name OPC specifically stood for OLE for Process Control,  and quickly changed over the first six months when the opportunity for standardization in industrial automation was quickly realized as being utilized beyond process control.  Factory automation and process control standardized quickly on the OPC technology.   OPC became the most successful industry standard actually adopted in industrial automation from a software perspective.  

When we first started OPC the thought pattern was the hardware companies would always build the OPC servers for their own respective hardware since they understood the intimate details of communicating to their respective devices.  The major HMI vendors would then build the OPC clients and magically OPC would provide a standardized communication interface for the hardware and software to easily work together in a seamless fashion.  Magically it all came together as OPC quickly release the first specification as a draft within six months from conception to completion.  Within the first year, of the initial OPC data access specification being finalized,  there was a significant groundswell of hardware and software vendors that all had OPC is the standard mechanism for interoperability for Microsoft platforms.  Vendors and system integrators realized a significant opportunity with OPC opening the door for interoperability.  OPC created a cottage industry whereby many companies were started using the OPC technology as their infrastructure for getting their foot into the door into industrial automation.  Software vendors started building a OPC server products,  and actually began developing better OPC servers for other people's hardware and hardware manufacturers themselves.  System integrators started to build their own custom OPC client applications because we provided a standard way for them to easily develop applications that would be able to communicate with any hardware in factory automation or process control.   It was so easy it became dangerous everyone and their brother became an OPC expert.   So the OPC Foundation then put together the necessary infrastructure to begin doing interoperability and certification testing and validation.

The OPC Foundation created a vision of interoperability based on a solid principle of success is measured by the level of adoption of technology.  Members have the unique opportunity to take advantage of the significant marketing and technical tools that the OPC Foundation provides to enable rapid deployment and certification of products based on the technology.

We are interested in your feedback and want to know the things that are important to you.  We are truly committed to providing the best value for our members and nonmembers alike with respect to providing the best technology, specifications, certification and process to enable plug-and-play multivendor multiplatform secure reliable interoperability.

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Vision

The OPC Foundation vision in 2010 - 2012 is focused on the principle of delivering the best specifications, technology, certification and process to truly achieve multivendor multiplatform secure reliable interoperability for moving data and information from embedded devices all the way through the enterprise in industrial automation.   The OPC Foundation is committed to partnering with consortiums, standards organizations, suppliers and end-users to facilitate development of the information models that will allow plug-and-play interoperability for all types of data and information for industrial automation and beyond.

We always talk about data we first started OPC,  but the reality is our talking about data and metadata,  or information about the data that were moving from embedded devices and translating into information as it moves from devices all the way up through the enterprise.  All of the new architectures are focused at providing information about data such that things like alarms and historical data are really nothing but data and information about that type of data.   We have now standardized on a base set of services for moving data and information and that's called OPC UA.  

The important thing is everything that the OPC Foundation does is always backward-compatible focused at plug-and-play interoperability.  We work with our suppliers to make sure they develop best-of-breed products and certify interoperability through self testing,  interoperability workshops and certification labs.

The vision of OPC is to be the foundation for interoperability for moving information vertically from the factory floor through the enterprise of multi-vendor systems as well as providing interoperability between devices on different industrial networks from different vendors.

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Organization

The OPC Foundation is governed by a Board of Directors elected by the membership. The Board, in turn, appoints the Foundation's Officers and the OPC Chief Architect.  A Marketing Committee and a Technical Advisory Council have been established, as have various working groups. (See the bylaws for complete information on the functioning of the organization.)

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The OPC Foundation Board of Directors has seven members:

Thomas Burke - OPC Foundation (chairman)
Dr. Reinhold Achatz - Siemens AG
Dr. Grant Wilson - Emerson Process Management
Nobuaki Konishi - Yokogawa
David Eisner - Honeywell
Ken Hall - Rockwell Automation
Russ Agrusa - ICONICS

Board of Directors Election
Each year, prior to the General Assembly, nominations for the three or four available Director positions are accepted. Elections are held either in person at the General Assembly Meeting or by email voting.

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Officers

President - Thomas J. Burke- OPC Foundation
Vice President - Reinhold Achatz - Siemens AG
Treasurer - David Eisner - Honeywell
Secretary - Michael Bryant - OPC Foundation

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OPC Technical Director
 
Thomas J. Burke (OPC Foundation)

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Technical Advisory Council

Chairperson - Karl-Heinz Deiretsbacher - Siemens

Michel Condemine - 4CE Industry
Wolfgang Mahnke - ABB
Matthias Damm - ascolab
Stefan Hoppe - Beckhoff
Mark Rice - Canary Labs
Paul Hunkar - DSInteroperability
Liam Power - Embedded Labs
Steve Dienstbier - Emerson Process Management
Dave Hardin - EnerNOC, Inc.
Eric Oursel - Euriware
John Gillerman - Grid Cloud Systems
Betsy Hawkinson - Honeywell
Jan Burian - ICONICS
James Wert - ILS Technologies
Jim Luth - Invensys
Tony Paine -Kepware Technologies
Rod Stein -MatrikonOPC
Thomas J. Burke - OPC Foundation
Nathan Pocock - OPC Foundation
Alisher Maksumov - OSIsoft
Ondrej Flek  - Rockwell
Bernhard Lokowandt - SAP
Thomas Rummel - Softing
Dave Emerson - WBF
Tim Glenn - Yokogawa

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Technical Working Groups

You must be a member of the OPC Foundation to participate in the OPC Technical Working Groups. Detailed information about these working groups are found in unique SharePoint sites that have been created deliberately as a repository. Members have complete access to the information in the SharePoint working groups. This is a significant opportunity to contribute and help drive the vision of interoperability by participating in the various working groups. There are regular electronic meetings of some of the working groups. The value proposition for OPC has always been a success is measured by the level of adoption of technology, consequently we are most interested in making sure that the foundation is serving the needs of the members of the OPC Foundation. We are not interested in developing academic specifications that do not solve problems that our members and end-users want. 

Complete information on how to create a SharePoint account and to have visibility of all of the OPC Working Groups can be found here.

Working Groups currently active are: (some of the identified groups below are hyperlinks directly to the SharePoint repository for that respective working group)

Compliance (CMP)
Device Integration (DI)
FDI
FDT
ISA-95
MES
ODVA
OPC .NET 3.0 (.NET)
PLCOpen (PLC)
Unified Architecture

OPC Foundation Technical Working Groups Repository Login information may be found at: SharePointLoginFAQ.

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Regional Organizations

OPC China
OPC Europe (EUR)
OPC Japan

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OPC Foundation Presidential Offices

Thomas J. Burke, OPC Foundation President & Executive Director
OPC Foundation
9967 E. Washington Street, Unit A
Auburn Township, Ohio  44023
USA

Phone: (1) 440 543 2663
Fax: (1) 480 483-7202
e-mail: OPC Foundation (Thomas Burke)

OPC Foundation Administrative Offices Scottsdale

Michael Bryant, Administrative Director
16101 N. 82nd Street
Suite 3B
Scottsdale, AZ 85260-1830
USA

email:  OPC Foundation (Michael Bryant)

Phone: (1) 480 483-6644
Fax: (1) 480 483-7202
OPC Foundation corporate e-mail: office@opcfoundation.org

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