Yet Another Russian CHP Plant Migrates to Domestic Software
A real-time platform now collects equipment data, benchmarks it against operating norms, and archives performance history at a power station in central Russia.

Rosatom Infrastructure Solutions, a division of the state nuclear corporation Rosatom, has migrated the Dyagilevskaya combined heat and power plant in Ryazan to domestically developed equipment monitoring software, the company’s press service said.
At the plant’s heat recovery boilers, engineers deployed the Infrastrukturnaya IoT-platforma (Infrastructure IoT Platform) software suite. It fully replaced foreign systems and expanded the plant’s diagnostic capabilities.
The Russian platform gathers a wide range of performance metrics from the heat recovery boilers in real time, compares them with standard benchmarks, and archives the history of parameter changes.
Detecting Deviations and Reducing Risks
One of the main advantages of switching to domestic software is the introduction of predictive analytics. The system can identify deviations in equipment performance at an early stage and warn of potential incident risks.
Another key feature is repair quality control. The platform automatically compares equipment performance parameters before and after maintenance work, generating an objective assessment. A similar system previously deployed at other facilities helped cut operating and energy costs by 9 to 16 percent and reduce accidents.








































