Public Power - September 2008 - (Page 54) HOMETOWN CONNECTIONS The Path to the Smart Grid Starts with SCADA and Substation Automation By Susan Ryba the last 10 years in the electric industry have been marked by change and uncertainty, the next few years promise to make the past appear tame by comparison. Rapidly escalating energy prices as well as federal and state legislative initiatives covering tightened environmental requirements, energy efficiency, time-of-use pricing and demand response will present myriad challenges to public power while legions of their most experienced managers are retiring. How does public power prepare itself in the midst of this uncertainty? Virtually every industry ad, article and presentation emphasizes how the smart grid will solve utility management problems, but how the smart grid infrastructure and its numerous applications will best serve public power remains an open question. The immediate challenge is to identify how to become an “intelligent utility” that will be ready to take advantage of smart metering and other innovations as they come online. Proper technology planning can go a long way toward helping public power managers tackle today’s many challenges. Survalent Technology, public power’s leading SCADA vendor and partner with Hometown Connections, recommends that each public power utility focus first on becoming an intelligent utility, taking concrete steps for automating more utility processes with the flexibility to accommodate new technologies as they develop. Survalent Technology sees 54 SEPTEMBER 2008 If James Wilhelm, electric system dispatcher for Roseville Electric in California, examines a graphical representation of electric network and system maps on Roseville’s Survalent SCADA system. SCADA and substation automation as the foundations for the intelligent utility. “The key for public power is to create a strategic plan for utility automation that focuses on operational excellence and superior customer service,” said William Rambo, vice president—marketing, Survalent Technology. “Each utility needs a technology road map and work plan.” Survalent is working with its electric utility customers and developing technology to increase their performance. The company is releasing new products and services this year including: • NERC Compliance, • Fault Detection, Isolation and Restoration (FDIR), • Automatic Vehicle Location (AVL), • The industry’s first Multispeak GIS batch interface to SCADA, and • An integrated outage management solution. Survalent is complying with NERC’s Critical Infrastructure Protection (CIP) Cyber Security Standards and recommends NERC compliance as a best practice for all utilities, even if not yet mandatory. Furthermore, Survalent is integrating its SCADA system with outage management software. According to Rambo, “a single, familiar operator interface is what customers are asking for, simplifying the operations and enabling better decision making especially during a crisis.” The goal is to make the visual information on screen straightforward for utility employees. Survalent has developed a software application that provides automatic fault detection, isolation, and restoration (FDIR). The SCADA system will grab fault information from a field device, isolate the fault (either by giving an operator a visual cue and recommending a switch order, or making a switching change automatically), and restore power via another feed. Power is restored promptly, minimizing the imSusan Ryba supports the marketing pact on customers. In addition, Survalent has of Hometown Connections. created a software interface us- ing MultiSpeak® to allow utilities to automatically batch transfer maps from GIS to SCADA on a regular schedule. MultiSpeak is an industrywide software interface specification that supports information-sharing between software applications. No longer will utility engineers need to cross check information from the city’s GIS system with SCADA. All mapping information is maintained in one location. Finally, Survalent Technology has developed an interface to GPS transponding systems. Vehicle latitude and longitude coordinates are converted to a mobile unit icon on Survalent’s Worldview graphical user interface map. Moving the mouse over the icon provides a “tool tip” that indicates where the vehicle is heading, its speed, and its latest field assignment. A “find” function allows the console operator to locate and track a vehicle continuously, a feature that is particularly valuable for managing multiple crews during a major storm or other environmental hazard. “Talking to public power officials across the country, I find there is great interest in the smart grid concept accompanied by hesitation about how to migrate utility technology and operations in that direction,” said Steve VanderMeer, national sales director, Hometown Connections. “Survalent’s approach to automating SCADA and substation operations resonates with public power as a logical, onestep-at-a-time road map for deploying technical innovations that are affordable and functional.” ❚ PUBLIC POWER
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Public Power - September 2008 Public Power - September 2008 Contents Perspective 10 Questions What’s Good About RTOs? Capturing Coal’s Carbon Carbon Safety Valves Greater Glass, Greater Savings Getting Customers to Embrace Compact Fluorescent Lights LEEDing Green Kansas City Shows How to Build Green For Governing Boards Safety Community Broadband Hometown Connections Parting Shot Public Power - September 2008 Public Power - September 2008 - Public Power - September 2008 (Page Cover1) Public Power - September 2008 - Public Power - September 2008 (Page Cover2) Public Power - September 2008 - Public Power - September 2008 (Page 1) Public Power - September 2008 - Public Power - September 2008 (Page 2) Public Power - September 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Public Power - September 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Public Power - September 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Public Power - September 2008 - Contents (Page 6) Public Power - September 2008 - Contents (Page 7) Public Power - September 2008 - Contents (Page 8) Public Power - September 2008 - Contents (Page 9) Public Power - September 2008 - Perspective (Page 10) Public Power - September 2008 - Perspective (Page 11) Public Power - September 2008 - 10 Questions (Page 12) Public Power - September 2008 - 10 Questions (Page 13) Public Power - September 2008 - 10 Questions (Page 14) Public Power - September 2008 - 10 Questions (Page 15) Public Power - September 2008 - 10 Questions (Page 16) Public Power - September 2008 - 10 Questions (Page 17) Public Power - September 2008 - 10 Questions (Page 18) Public Power - September 2008 - 10 Questions (Page 19) Public Power - September 2008 - What’s Good About RTOs? (Page 20) Public Power - September 2008 - What’s Good About RTOs? (Page 21) Public Power - September 2008 - What’s Good About RTOs? (Page 22) Public Power - September 2008 - What’s Good About RTOs? (Page 23) Public Power - September 2008 - What’s Good About RTOs? (Page 24) Public Power - September 2008 - What’s Good About RTOs? (Page 25) Public Power - September 2008 - Capturing Coal’s Carbon (Page 26) Public Power - September 2008 - Capturing Coal’s Carbon (Page 27) Public Power - September 2008 - Capturing Coal’s Carbon (Page 28) Public Power - September 2008 - Capturing Coal’s Carbon (Page 29) Public Power - September 2008 - Capturing Coal’s Carbon (Page 30) Public Power - September 2008 - Capturing Coal’s Carbon (Page 31) Public Power - September 2008 - Carbon Safety Valves (Page 32) Public Power - September 2008 - Carbon Safety Valves (Page 33) Public Power - September 2008 - Carbon Safety Valves (Page 34) Public Power - September 2008 - Carbon Safety Valves (Page 35) Public Power - September 2008 - Greater Glass, Greater Savings (Page 36) Public Power - September 2008 - Greater Glass, Greater Savings (Page 37) Public Power - September 2008 - Greater Glass, Greater Savings (Page 38) Public Power - September 2008 - Greater Glass, Greater Savings (Page 39) Public Power - September 2008 - Getting Customers to Embrace Compact Fluorescent Lights (Page 40) Public Power - September 2008 - Getting Customers to Embrace Compact Fluorescent Lights (Page 41) Public Power - September 2008 - LEEDing Green (Page 42) Public Power - September 2008 - LEEDing Green (Page 43) Public Power - September 2008 - LEEDing Green (Page 44) Public Power - September 2008 - LEEDing Green (Page 45) Public Power - September 2008 - Kansas City Shows How to Build Green (Page 46) Public Power - September 2008 - Kansas City Shows How to Build Green (Page 47) Public Power - September 2008 - For Governing Boards (Page 48) Public Power - September 2008 - For Governing Boards (Page 49) Public Power - September 2008 - Safety (Page 50) Public Power - September 2008 - Safety (Page 51) Public Power - September 2008 - Community Broadband (Page 52) Public Power - September 2008 - Community Broadband (Page 53) Public Power - September 2008 - Hometown Connections (Page 54) Public Power - September 2008 - Hometown Connections (Page 55) Public Power - September 2008 - Parting Shot (Page 56) Public Power - September 2008 - Parting Shot (Page Cover3) Public Power - September 2008 - Parting Shot (Page Cover4)
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