The journey toward truly intelligent substations
In line with the so-called fourth industrial revolution, traditional energy network substations are evolving into digital substations, with major breakthroughs that may provide enormous gains for T&D utilities. Asset digitization, situational awareness and decentralized automation are examples of new valued features being incorporated.
A combination of technology and macroeconomic factors is driving an in-depth transformation of the energy industry. To name a few: the transition toward a new mix of energy sources with greater content from renewable sources; the need to improve power delivery reliability and quality; and pressure to reduce operating expenditures on network assets. The resulting challenges for the electrical grid include integrating distributed energy resources, adjusting supply and demand in real time, enhancing overall equipment performance while minimizing service downtime and blackouts, and so on. In consequence, next-generation electrical grids are becoming more complex and, thus, need to be more and more intelligent to cope with bi-directional flows of energy and information. This can be achieved by adding monitoring and diagnostics devices and smart software tools.
Electrical substations are at the core of this evolution. Being the critical nodes of the energy highways, “it is clear that, in order to make the grid more digital and intelligent, we need to start with making substations not only digital but intelligent, too,” says Javier Lopez, Senior Product Marketing Leader at Grid Solutions. “And this is what Grid Solutions has been doing in recent years.”