Standardized Digital Twin: Building trust in data across the entire asset lifecycle
A standardized Digital Twin, powered by the Asset Administration Shell (AAS), creates a trusted, vendor-neutral source of asset data that stays consistent and traceable across the entire lifecycle of industrial plants.
Article14.04.2026
In brief
Asset information is often scattered across documents and proprietary tools, creating delays, rework, and downtime.
A standardized Digital Twin provides a harmonized, machine-readable asset model that works across systems, suppliers, and lifecycle stages.
The Asset Administration Shell (AAS, by IDTA) structures asset data into standard submodels and enables interoperability without translation.
A standardized Digital Twin supports smoother engineering handovers and gives operations and maintenance teams reliable, traceable information for faster, safer work.
Open standards reduce vendor lock-in and keep asset data accessible and usable over decades in long-lived process plants.
Table of contentsTable of contents
What's missing? Trusted asset data
Industrial plants rely on thousands of instruments, devices, and systems to operate safely and efficiently. And with thousands of installed instruments, it’s no surprise that most industrial plants are not short on data.
Yet in many facilities today, essential asset information is still scattered across documents, hidden in proprietary systems, or locked away in isolated tools. Additionally, when data is incomplete, outdated, or inconsistent, the consequences are immediate: delays, manual rework, uncertainty in operations, and avoidable downtime.
What is missing is a single, consistent source of truth that remains reliable over decades of operation. Over time, this fragmentation erodes trust. Engineers question whether documentation is current. Maintenance teams spend time validating data instead of using it. Audits and regulatory checks require manual effort because information cannot be traced with confidence. As plants evolve, this lack of continuity becomes a growing risk rather than a minor inconvenience.
Solving this challenge requires more than digital tools; it requires a standardized way to describe, structure, and exchange asset information. This is where the standardized Digital Twin, powered by the Asset Administration Shell (AAS), comes into play.
From complexity to clarity with a standardized Digital Twin
A standardized Digital Twin provides a harmonized, machine-readable digital representation of an industrial asset. Unlike isolated digital models or proprietary data structures, it follows a common framework that ensures information can be understood and reused across systems, suppliers, and lifecycle stages.
At its core, the standardized Digital Twin transforms asset data from static documents into a living digital foundation. Specifications, documentation, certificates, and operational information are no longer disconnected files, but structured elements of a single digital representation that evolves alongside the physical asset.
This standardization is what turns digitalization from a local optimization into a scalable, longterm strategy.
The Asset Administration Shell: A standardized data hub for assets
The Asset Administration Shell (AAS) specified by the Industrial Digital Twin Association (IDTA), defines how an industrial asset is represented digitally in a uniform and machine-readable [BA3] way. Instead of storing information in isolated systems, the AAS structures asset data into standardized submodels that can be exchanged seamlessly between engineering tools, control systems, maintenance platforms, and cloud applications, as well as enterprises.
Importantly, the AAS is not another IT system to manage. It acts as a standardized data hub that allows different systems to access the same asset information without translation or duplication. In practice, this means that asset data remains consistent in data format and semantics throughout the lifecycle, regardless of where it is used or which supplier originally provided it.
The AAS enables vendor-agnostic interoperability, data consistency, and data governance, as well as scalable, information-centric data access.
What this means across the asset lifecycle
During engineering and commissioning, a standardized Digital Twin enables smoother handovers between project phases. Asset data is stored in one central location, allowing easy access for reuse directly across tools and disciplines, reducing manual data entry and minimizing errors early in the lifecycle.
In operations and maintenance, teams can access reliable, up-to-date asset information. Documentation, certificates, and configuration data remain traceable and consistent, supporting faster troubleshooting, safer interventions, and more efficient maintenance workflows.
For compliance and future requirements, the benefits become even more tangible. Structured, standardized asset data supports audit readiness, long-term documentation obligations, and emerging regulations such as digital product documentation, all without relying on manual consolidation or system-specific exports.
Across all phases, the standardized Digital Twin shifts the focus from searching for information to using it with confidence.
Openness is essential in complex process industries
Process plants are built to last. Over decades, they have grown organically, integrating devices and systems from multiple suppliers. In such environments, proprietary data models and closed ecosystems quickly become barriers.
Open, standards-based digitalization is therefore not a preference; it is a necessity. Only interoperable data structures ensure that asset information remains accessible, secure, and usable over the long term, independent of individual vendors or technologies.
The standardized Digital Twin, built on the Asset Administration Shell, follows this principle by design. It enables vendor-neutral integration while preserving data ownership and security, allowing customers to evolve their digital architectures without being locked into proprietary solutions.
Collaboration as the foundation of trust
Standardization does not happen in isolation. Building a trusted digital foundation for industry requires close collaboration across suppliers, users, and research organizations.
Endress+Hauser actively contributes to this ecosystem by working with initiatives such as the Open Industry 4.0 Alliance, the Industrial Digital Twin Association (IDTA), and a broad network of customers, partners, and research institutions, such as the Digital Data Chain Consortium (DDCC) and the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT). Together, these communities develop and refine standardized submodels and interfaces that reflect real industrial use cases.
This collaborative approach ensures that standards evolve in line with practical requirements and that digital twins remain interoperable, secure, and future-ready.
A digital foundation built for the long term
The true value of a standardized Digital Twin lies not in a single application, but in the trust, it establishes across the entire asset lifecycle. By providing a consistent, open, and machine-readable representation of industrial assets, it creates the foundation for efficient engineering, reliable operations, regulatory compliance, and future digital services.
As digitalization accelerates, standardized Digital Twin ensures that data remains meaningful, accessible, and trustworthy — today and for decades to come.
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