New mission library for EON Live — the flight simulator for industrial plants — turns the moments that actually kill people and cost millions — every one grounded in real incidents and cited data — into runnable, physics-driven training matched to any facility.
Irvine, CA – July 14, 2026 – EON AI Ventures today announced The Situation Room — the mission library of EON Live, the flight simulator for industrial plants, running on the company’s real-time physics runtime for the Work Intelligence platform. The Situation Room is a curated catalog of 120 industrial situations across seven genres plus a flagship set — lock-out and stored energy, start-up and shutdown transients, overpressure and relief, rotating equipment, process upsets, loss of containment, and utility failures. Every title is grounded in real incidents and real standards: Piper Alpha (1988, 167 dead), BP Texas City (2005, 15 dead), Buncefield (2005), DuPont La Porte (2014), and the investigation record of the CSB, OSHA, API and IOGP.
By transforming historical incidents into immersive, physics-based training experiences, The Situation Room helps organizations improve preparedness, reduce operational risk, and strengthen workforce competency. The concept, scenario framework, and enterprise applications are detailed in the accompanying white paper, “EON Live – The Situation Room: The Moments That Matter, On Demand.”
Each situation is a card a worker can actually read: WHAT happens, WHY it matters, HOW to handle it, HOW OFTEN it occurs in the real world, what the CONSEQUENCES have been, and the cited statistics behind all of it. Sixty-six of the 120 titles carry real, cited frequency statistics; the remainder are honestly marked “not quantified in public sources” rather than dressed up with invented numbers. The company believes this candor is itself a differentiator in a market accustomed to unsourced safety content.
Click on the image below to access the EON Live – The Situation Room: The moments that matter, on demand presentation.
The library is not generic courseware. EON Universal, the platform’s facility-understanding layer, automatically matches which situations fit a customer’s specific facility by scanning its components and topology — a title that needs a distillation column and a blocked bottoms valve only lights up on a rig that has them. One click then runs the situation on EON Live’s real-time physics twin, where the consequences emerge from the simulation rather than from a script. As the company puts it internally, “physics doesn’t hallucinate.”
What it unlocks
Workers browse the Mission Library, one shelf per genre, and every title plays at three difficulty levels — Beginner, Operator and Expert. Crucially, difficulty is not new content: the levels are physics dials on the same scenario. Beginner runs with guidance on and honest sensors; Expert runs the same card with cascading faults, at least one lying sensor, and tight time margins. Because the physics generates the run each time, one simulator yields effectively infinite variations of the industry’s most dangerous moments — the start-up transients and isolation errors where incidents actually cluster, and which conventional training almost never rehearses. Assessment follows the same logic: competence is scored on how a worker stabilised the situation against a per-card rubric, producing provable competence rather than a quiz score.
“The industry has spent fifty years writing brilliant incident reports, and then training people with slide decks. A deck can tell you what happened at Texas City. The Situation Room puts you in front of the same misleading level gauge and lets the physics decide whether you would have caught it. These are the moments that kill people and cost millions — and now any facility can rehearse them, on its own equipment, as many times as it takes,” stated Dan Lejerskar, Founder & Chairman, EON AI Ventures.
“Our customers do not need another scenario built site by site at consulting prices. They need one cited, curated library that compounds — the same 120 situations, automatically matched to every facility they load. That is what a platform is for,” said Mats Johansson, President, EON AI Ventures.
The Situation Room is being demonstrated to enterprise customers now on EON Live, beginning with its flagship set — including stored-pressure release during lock-out/tag-out and the Texas City-pattern column overfill on start-up. The research behind all 120 titles is complete and cited; card authoring, poster art and the facility matcher roll out in stages through 2026. The company notes that its live engine runs Tier-1 real-time physics — pressures, temperatures, levels and valve states — and that consequences beyond that tier, such as blast overpressure, are presented as pre-set consequence states and never misrepresented as computed physics.
Read more in the EON Live – The Situation Room: The Moments That Matter, On Demand. white paper.
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About EON AI Ventures
EON AI Ventures is the company behind Work Intelligence (WI) — the enterprise’s missing system of record, capturing how work is actually done and turning it into an owned, compounding digital asset. Built on One System — Human 2.0 (the vision), the Intelligence Flywheel (the engine), and Work Intelligence (the asset) — EON serves enterprises in safety-critical industries worldwide. Founded by the leadership behind EON Reality, with 25 years of experience in immersive learning, EON AI Ventures supports 4,400+ institutional customers across 80+ countries. Learn more at www.eonaiventures.com.