Imagination at work
Connecting the Smart City - How utilities link citizens to services
The network as the centre of the Smart City Sept., 2015
Presentation Agenda
• Agenda
• The convergence of Smart City, Industrial Internet & Smart Grid
• Typical e-Services applications
• The importance of the network
• Requirements of network centric GIS
• Examples in planning & maintaining essential service.
• Where to next ?
2
Spatial data is an important part of the Smart City. Providing safe, reliable essential services is common to both the Smart City and Utilities. What can we learn from how network infrastructure providers connect people to services ?
Convergence
3
Smart Grid
Smart Cities GIS
IoT Industrial Internet
Network Centric Information
Information infrastructure
Sources: (1) UtilityPoint, by Ethan Cohen 7/18/0 (2) EPRI® Intelligrid
The integration of two infrastructures … securely …
Electrical infrastructure
What is a smart grid?
+ Embracing renewables
Empowering consumers
Increasing productivity
Reducing CO2 emissions
Increasing efficiency
Smart grid landscape Key GE applications
DATA & COMMUNICATIONS
Power Generation Transmission & Distribution
Residential & Community
Industrial & Commercial
Diagnostics & visualization
Substation digitization
Mobile applications
Reliability & demand forecasting
Smart appliances
Home energy use monitoring
Backup power mgmt & control
TOU reporting
Energy management
Generation optimization
Renewables
Microgrids
Protection & control
Advanced metering infrastructure Distributed generation infrastructure
6 GE Confidential GESoftware.com | @GESoftware | #IndustrialInternet
Internet of things 1 Intelligent
machines 2 Big Data 3 Analytics 4 A living network of machines, data, and people
Increasing system intelligence through embedded software
Generating data-driven insights and enhancing asset performance
Transforming massive volumes of information into intelligence
Forces shaping the Industrial Internet
Traditional Approach to GIS & Smart Cities
7
• 80% of data is spatially linked • A picture is worth.. A map is worth… • GIS as the “telescope”
• Database structures • Cadastre data layers • Geo-Databases • Data portals
• Access to eServices
Typical e-Services
8
• Parking • Property • Access to services • Dial before you dig
What do we hear from the global community?
9
33. We recognize that sustainable urban development and
management are crucial to the quality of life…”
SDG 6. Ensure availability and
sustainable management of water…for all
33 (Cont.) ..we will also take account of population trends and projections in our national rural
and urban development strategies
SDG 7. Ensure access to affordable, reliable,
sustainable and modern energy for all.
SDG 9. Build resilient infrastructure , promote inclusive and sustainable
industrialization ..
What do we hear from Network Providers?
Title or Job Number | XX Month 201X 10
One version of the truth is not optional – no matter
what
We need to evolve from highly manual,
spreadsheet based operations
We need to filter critical data, improve accuracy
and access, and speed up the time to decisions
Collect, aggregate analyze and report data that is
actionable and can drive insight
Want to lead the industry to the performance and
safety level of the aviation industry
Requirements of Network Centric GIS
Modelling the real world: network models.
12
Access to services
Reliability Impact to environment Sustainable management
Where is the existing network?
How much capacity ?
Future population growth ?
Where is new build planned ?
What is the building cost ?
Other planning considerations ?
Safety, Security, Risk management
Access to Services challenges
Example: Planning essential services
14
Example – Water Outage management
15
Supporting Smart Water initiatives
• NRW
• Regulatory Compliance
• Asset Life extension
• Energy Management
• Efficient use of resources
Example – Asset Maintenance
16
Risk Management
• Process supported by
• SCADA Integration
• HA Integration
• Asset data Analytics
Supporting which Smart Water initiatives
• Operations Management
• Maintenance Planning
• Predictive Fiscal Planning
• Asset Life extension
• NRW
• Mobile Solutions
Example: Gas network operation
17
High Consequence Area Analysis (HCA)
Leak Analysis
Outage management
Field engineer with OTDR trace tool
Telecommunications
18
Fibre fault NOC
Alarms Port
Where is the fault? Request to PNI via GSS
Dispatch engineer using GPS coordinate of fault
from PNI
Distance
PNI
Fault location data
View location in Google Earth
KML output from GSS
Where to next..
19
…Happening now…
20
Asset Management Maturity Model
23
Innocence Awareness Understanding Competence Excellence
Asset Management Maturity
Mai
nten
ance
& S
pare
Spe
nds
($)
Rel
iabi
lity
& P
erfo
rman
ce
Maintenance is an expense Timeline (1-5 years)
Maintenance is an investment
Costs go down… while value and performance
increase
Repairs as good as before
Reactive – fix it when it breaks
Proactive, preventive maintenance
Systems are valuable tools Information as an asset
Focus on life cycle and reliability
Optimized decision making
Maintenance is part of the supply chain
Repairs as good as NEW
Proactive, predictive maintenance
A “Pendulum Swing” in attitude, shifting from cost focus to value
focus
A power system that serves millions of customers and has an intelligent communications infrastructure enabling the timely, secure and adaptable information flow needed to provide power to the evolving digital economy.
Definition
Characteristics Defined by EPRI
An electric power system that is:
. . . A smarter grid
Smart Grid
• Self-healing to correct problems early • Interactive with consumers and markets • Optimized to make best use of resources
• Secure from threats and hazards • Predictive to prevent emergencies
• Distributed assets and information
• Integrated to transform data into Information