[Home]   [Full version]  

Oracle to Buy Another Utility Technology Provider

Apr 25 ,Technology


On the heels of closing on the Hyperion deal, Oracle buys meter data management provider Lodestar.

Oracle continued its shopping spree on April 24 when company officials announced plans to acquire Lodestar, a provider of meter data management for the utilities industry.

Lodestar is headquartered in Peabody, Mass., and has a list of customers that includes some of the largest energy companies in North America, Europe and Australia.

Financial conditions of the deal were not disclosed. The announcement comes on the heels of Oracle closing its $3.3 billion acquisition of Hyperion, which provides business intelligence software. But the move may be most closely related to Oracle's acquisition of SPL WorldGroup in 2006.

SPL WorldGroup's software, among other things, manages customer care and billing, mobile work force management, and outages and distribution management and asset management designed for electric, gas and water utilities.

The combination of Lodestar's complementary products with the suite of utilities applications acquired through SPL underscores Oracle's commitment to the utilities industry, Oracle officials said.

"With the addition of Lodestar's products, Oracle plans to deliver the most comprehensive suite of mission-critical operational systems for all segments of the utilities industry, combining meter data management, load profiling, pricing, marketing, sales, customer care, billing, analytics and management of the networks, work force, assets and business-to-business transactions," said Larry Hagewood, senior vice president and general manager at Oracle, in a statement.

Hagewood said that Oracle is putting utilities in control by simplifying their infrastructure, enabling greater business insight and aiding process improvement, which will increase customer satisfaction and loyalty.

"We expect our combined solutions will help facilitate the transformation of utilities to leading-edge infrastructure that creates operational efficiencies and competitive advantage for our customers."

Lodestar's Chairman and CEO Chris Hamilos called the planned acquisition an exciting chapter in his company's evolution.

"The natural synergies between Oracle's and Lodestar's premier product suites, coupled with Oracle's extensive research and development capacity, will enable us to further enhance our products and ensure our clients' continued success," Hamilos said.

The purchase is subject to customary conditions and is expected to close in May 2007. After the closing of the transaction, Oracle expects that Lodestar's employees will join Oracle's Utilities Global Business Unit.

Copyright 2007 by Ziff Davis Media, Distributed by United Press International

Related stories:

Satellite phones make cowboys wildfire sentinels
(AP) -- The craggy gullies where Idaho cowboy Paul Nettleton runs 1,200 head of cattle are often precious minutes from reliable cell phone coverage. That could spell disaster in this region where sudden summertime storms howl in from eastern Oregon, bringing dry lightning that can ignite fast-moving wildfires on sage- and juniper-covered hillsides. Unchecked, the flames could quickly turn this old mining town's historic wooden buildings to ashes.
Satellite phones make cowboys wildfire sentinels
(AP) -- The craggy gullies where Idaho cowboy Paul Nettleton runs 1,200 head of cattle are often precious minutes from reliable cell phone coverage. That could spell disaster in this region where sudden summertime storms howl in from eastern Oregon, bringing dry lightning that can ignite fast-moving wildfires on sage- and juniper-covered hillsides. Unchecked, the flames could quickly turn this old mining town's historic wooden buildings to ashes.
FAA outage reveals odd computing practices
(AP) -- When a computer glitch at a Federal Aviation Administration center caused widespread airline delays this week, it served as a reminder that the U.S. flight system is waiting for a modernizing overhaul. But it also appears the FAA's management of its existing technologies falls short of standards in other vital sectors.
IBM to Build First Cloud Computing Center in China
IBM today announced it will establish the first Cloud Computing Center for software companies in China, which will be situated at the new Wuxi Tai Hu New Town Science and Education Industrial Park in Wuxi, China
UC San Diego begins trading greenhouse gas credits on Chicago Climate Exchange
The University of California, San Diego has become the first campus on the West Coast to join the Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX), North America’s only voluntary, legally binding trading system to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases. UC San Diego is only the seventh university in the nation to join the climate exchange.
UC Davis Will Study Users of New Plug-in Hybrid Cars
The latest green car goes under the UC Davis microscope today: a hybrid sedan modified to recharge from a standard 110-volt electric outlet. It can travel as far as 20 miles on batteries before drinking a drop of gasoline, or get 100 miles per gallon in combined gasoline-electric mode.
SolarWinds Makes Waves in Network Management
SolarWinds, a successful network management tools provider that few have heard of, will stop flying under the radar May 21 at Interop when it launches the latest release of its Engineer's Toolset and announces the acquisition of Neon Software.
Lenovo Takes R-Series Wide
The company's first two Centrino Duo laptops include the first widescreen 14-inch R-Series ThinkPad and an updated small-business notebook.

News discussion:

Technology news

[Home]   [Full version]