For engineering firms managing refineries, chemical plants, pipelines and long-lived industrial facilities, some of the most valuable project knowledge exists not in databases but in decades of reports, drawings and the experience of engineers nearing retirement. With technical documentation spread across multiple, design and information systems and project archives, firms are increasingly exploring artificial intelligence tools to capture that expertise and make it usable across complex industrial asset portfolios. Worley Consulting says it is deploying such an approach through an artificial intelligence platform designed to organize engineering documentation, operational records and internal expertise across industrial projects. The system was developed internally and is now being offered to clients through a partnership with software firm Bloomfire. RELATED What Does Construction's AI-Powered Future Look Like?…