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Alternative Energy: Be smart to survive

Bill Meehan
Director of Utility Solutions, ESRI
bmeehan@esri.com
What would happen if everyone stopped using
petroleum to power their automobiles and
switched to electric vehicles? Demand for raw
electric energy would soar. The most likely alternative to
petrol is some form of electric power that would surely put
significant strain on electric generation, transmission and
distribution systems. While that's not likely to happen
overnight, it may happen quicker than we think, given the
world's depleting oil supply and climate change.
As carbon cap-and-trade systems are implemented, the
percentage of distributed green generation sources will also
grow considerably. Already wind and solar energy systems
are proliferating. These intermittent sources of power challenge
the grid. Smaller, more geographically dispersed generators
will place additional burdens on the electric subtransmission
and distribution systems. Today, impending
changes aside, electric utilities face fundamental business
challenges. The existing electric infrastructure is old. A significant
portion of utility workers will soon retire. Access to
capital is difficult. Customers are intolerant of power interruptions
and demand modern interaction with their utility.
These factors, additional facility security, and the need to
keep costs under control will force utilities to operate differently
and more intelligently.
UTILITIES WILL IMPLEMENT SMART GRID
JUST TO SURVIVE
What exactly is a smart grid?
Smart grid is a concept. It is about an electric delivery system
that responds to the needs of, and directly communicates
with, consumers. Smart grid is about four things: managing
loads effectively; providing significantly more automation
during post-outage restoration; enabling interaction
between energy providers and consumers; and understanding
the health of the electric system before something bad
happens.
What are the parts of the Smart
Grid?
The key to smart grid is the installation
of smart meters to link consumer
behaviour with electric energy consumption.
Smart grid will require energy
storage systems to level usage peaks
and enable utilities to access the most
efficient and environmentally sound
generation options. Smart grid will
require a distribution management
system (DMS) for analysis and control.
A DMS will enable utilities to make
decisions based on information from
the sensor network and smart meters
about loading, predictive equipment
failures, outages, and restoration. A
sophisticated data management system
will store historic and current realtime
data about the system from
meters and sensors.
Smart grid will communicate the
state of the system from the sensor network
to both the utility and the customers.
The electric distribution system
will grow from a single network to
an integrated dual network system.
One network will represent the power
system and the other an advanced
communication network. Utilities need
a means of collecting data from the
sensors and smart meters to make decision
about self-healing the grid, load
shifting and billing. Self-healing means
that the electric distribution system
will configure itself to limit the extent
of customer outages
without
human intervention.
Smart grid will
need real-time
analytic engines
able to analyse
the network,
determine the
current state and
condition of the
system, predict
what may happen,
and develop a plan. These engines
will need data from the utility and
from outside parties such as weather
services. The combination of smart
meters, data management, communication
network, and applications specific
to metering is advanced metering
infrastructure (AMI).
A critical facet of smart grid is the
underlying electric and communications
network. An enterprise geographic
information system (GIS) provides
the tools, applications, workflows, and
integration to support smart grid.
THE CRITICAL ROLE OF
ENTERPRISE GIS IN
SMART GRID
An enterprise GIS exhibits four strong
patterns of behaviour: data management
of assets such as sensors, poles,
conduit, smart meters, trucks, and people;
situational
awareness for visualising
the business
spatially in cases
such as a small house
with high electric
consumption; data
collection from the
field to integrate
with corporate data
bases; analysis and
planning to determine the optimal
placement of fault indicators or locate
places in the system most susceptible
to lighting strokes.
DATA MANAGEMENT
GIS is widely recognised for its strong
role in managing traditional electric
transmission and distribution, and
telecommunications networks. GIS
provides the most comprehensive
inventory of the electrical distribution
network components and their spatial
locations. With smart grid's sophisticated
communication network superimposed
on the electric network, data
management with GIS becomes utterly
critical.
SITUATIONAL AWARENESS
Utilities use GIS to visualise the electric
and communications systems and the
relationships that exist between them.
It goes well beyond the traditional
"stare and compare" method commonly
used by utilities to a notion of seeing
relationships. GIS provides a means to
monitor and express the health of the
system in an obvious way with commands
such as, "show me all the sensors
that have failed to report results in
the last hour." GIS can show the realtime
view of the grid and note where
things are changing. In effect, GIS (as
compared with a SCADA system)
shows the complete state of the grid,
represented by a realistic model in a
way that people understand.
DATA COLLECTION
GIS helps manage data about the condition
of utility assets. After parts of the
system go into service, utilities must
maintain the system through the collection
and maintenance of asset condition
data. Some condition data can
come from automated systems and
others from inspection systems. Utilities
are rapidly adopting GIS-based
mobile devices for inspection and
maintenance. Enterprise GIS, with its
desktop, server, and mobile components,
allows utilities to gather condition
data.
SPATIAL ANALYSIS AND
PLANNING
The power of GIS helps utilities understand
the relationship of its assets to
each other and to the surrounding
environment. Since the smart grid is
composed of two networks-electric and
communications-utilities must understand
the physical and spatial relationships
among all network components.
These relationships will form the basis
for some of the advanced decision making
the smart grid makes. Smart grid
must have a solid understanding of the
connectivity of both networks. GIS provides
the tools and workflows for network
modeling and advanced tracing.
GIS is used to determine optimal locations
for smart grid components. During
the rollout of smart grid, utilities
will need significant analysis to determine
the right location for sensors,
communication marshalling cabinets,
and a host of other devices such as fiber
optics in conduit and on poles. GIS provides
the proper means to perform
these design services, since the optimal
locations depend so heavily on the
existing infrastructure.
GIS can provide a spatial context to
the analytics and metrics of smart grid.
With GIS, utilities can track the metrics
over time and provide a convenient
means of visualising trends. Since
smart grid is supposed to be smart, it
must be able to provide advanced grid
performance analytics, track trends in
equipment performance and customer
behaviour and record key performance
metrics.
IS GIS SMART GRID
READY?
The data quality in a utility's GIS must
be outstanding. Utilities are now able
to build a GIS on an accurate land base.
Since GIS has been used by utilities for
more than 20 years, it predates GPS.
Utilities that continue to base facility
location on antiquated grid systems
will not be able to successfully use GIS
until they make the land base and the
facility information spatially correct.
For utilities that have not yet built a
comprehensive GIS for infrastructure,
the goal should be an accurate, GPScompliant
land base. Lack of a digital
model of the electrical system-whether
urban, overhead, underground, networked,
radial, or some combinationwill
limit the overall effectiveness of
the smart grid.
Some utilities have built a GIS piecemeal,
with some parts of the service
territory converted to digital form and
others still in CAD or even paper form.
Many have only converted primary
data and not secondary networks. Others
have converted rural overhead
areas, but have not converted urban
networked areas. The piecemeal
approach is not effective if GIS is to be
the heart of the smart grid. Installing
smart meters in areas where the utility
has not modeled the electrical network
will inhibit much of the usefulness of
the equipment.
In this case, the use of the smart
meter will probably be limited to
billing. The lack of good customer
address information will inhibit the
utilities' use of GIS for smart grid. Even
in countries where virtually every
premise has a physical address, utilities
struggle to keep data current.
GIS MAKES SMART GRID
SMART
In concert with smart grid technologies
such as advanced sensors, smart
meters, energy storage devices, and
renewable energy systems, GIS will
contribute to the transformation of the
grid from a largely passive and blind
system to an interactive, intelligent,
and energy efficient system. For the
smart grid initiatives to be successful,
utilities must make sure their GIS is
enterprise ready, integrated with all
their back office systems, and kept
meticulously up-to-date.