Another key function is
product flow control. Reservoir parks receive products from multiple upstream sources and supply several downstream consumers. Control actions include regulating inlet and outlet throughput,
redirecting product flows, limiting transfer rates, and adjusting routing based on equipment availability or production priorities.
Reservoir parks also support
product blending and stream separation. Multiple crude oil grades, intermediate streams, or finished products may be blended to achieve target specifications, while individual process streams can be divided into multiple product streams when required. These operations maintain product quality while preserving overall material balance.
Maintenance activities require additional flexibility. When storage tanks, pipelines, pumps, or connected process units become unavailable, the control system must safely reconfigure material routing and restore normal operation once equipment returns to service.
Thus, refinery digital twins require runtime control rather than static process configuration. Engineers should be able to modify operating modes, flow limits, routing strategies, and other control parameters during simulation, making reservoir park control a key component of production planning, operational analysis, and decision support.