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Smart Grid City: A blueprint for a connected, intelligent grid community

Smart Grid City: A blueprint for a connected, intelligent grid community. The grid today. Utilities committed to proving safe, reliable power. Must provide quality service with an aging infrastructure Supplying energy in a carbon constrained world

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Smart Grid City: A blueprint for a connected, intelligent grid community

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  1. Smart Grid City:A blueprint for a connected,intelligent grid community

  2. The grid today • Utilities committed to proving safe, reliable power. • Must provide quality service with an aging infrastructure • Supplying energy in a carbon constrained world • Working with non-integrated systems and processes Smart technologies can provide solutions to modern grid challenges.

  3. “Analog” Grid Centuries-old design

  4. “Smart” Grid • Energy storage devices • Local power generation • Digital sensors and controls • Real-time data • Real-time price signals • Broadband communications Digital intelligence infused throughout the grid • Smart Homes • Smart Buildings • Electric transportation

  5. Drivers for change • Grid reliability • Aging assets, heightened load • Environment: • Global climate concerns • State mandates for green power • Energy Security: • Homeland security • Dependence on foreign oil • Customer Choices: • Growing needs and expectations • Desire for greater flexibility and options

  6. The grid of tomorrow It’s more than just smart meters! Over the next 10 to 20 years, our industry can evolve more rapidly than ever before.

  7. Moving beyond the traditional… The Smart Grid will: • Be more reliable. • Be self-healing and self-monitoring. • Be more secure. • Be cleaner and greener. • Support widespread distributed generation. • Help customers better control energy use in their homes and businesses. • Achieve lower throughput, thus lowering prices. Xcel Energy is setting a Smart Grid benchmark among North American utilities.

  8. Xcel Energy’s strategy • Smart Grid is an end-to-end solution • Aligned with environmental goals • Consumer-focused approach • Service-based business model • Joint R&D partner investments • Smart Grid Consortium formed in 2007

  9. Accenture: IT and business modeling • Current Group: High-speed communications • Schweitzer Engineering Labs: Substation technology • Ventyx: Workflow management software • Xcel Energy imagine. inspire. innovate.

  10. Smart Grid City - Boulder, Colo. “An international showcase of smart grid possibilities… a comprehensive demonstration of an intelligent grid community” • Test technology • Integrate smart grid portfolio of projects • Prove benefits

  11. Smart Grid City • Involves the entire energy pathway from the power source to the home and all points in between • Rich in IT • High-speed, real-time, two-way communications • Sensors enabling rapid diagnosis and corrections • Dispatched distributed generation (PHEVs, wind, solar) • Energy storage • In-home energy controls • Automated home energy use

  12. Boulder’s Key Strengths • Ideal size (50,000 customers/meters) • Ideal geographic location (easy access to needed grid components) • Ideal Smart Grid consumers: • Web-savvy, early adopters • Environmentally aware • Collaborative opportunities with: • University of Colorado • National Center for Atmospheric Research • National Institute of Standards and Technology • City leaders

  13. Power Production Energy storage Distributed generation Utility Operations Smart Outage Management Smart Distribution Assets Smart Substations Consumer Smart House Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicles Smart Grid City projects

  14. Smart Grid City projects

  15. Energy Storage Scenario: Wind energy is stored in a battery for use when needed. • Consumers can use wind power when they want—not just when the wind is blowing. • Energy storage devices can be tapped whenever demand is high.

  16. Smart Substation Scenario: Digital intelligence gives substation operators remote control of facilities. • Allows faster adjustments to conditions • Prevents blackouts, makes for faster recovery • More flexibility to re-route power • Monitors help keep facilities and sites secure

  17. Smart Distribution Assets Scenario: A smart meter detects an isolated outage in a residential neighborhood. • The utility pings the meter and is able to send the right crew, with the right tools, to the right location to turn power back on quickly, OR • Can remotely re-connect power • Faster restoration time and fewer outage minutes

  18. Smart Outage Management Scenario: A customer’s power goes out at their home; but they don’t need to call the utility. Its already located the cause of the outage. • Sensors & monitors embedded throughout the grid detect abnormalities/disruptions • Real-time data leads to rapid diagnosis and correction

  19. Smart House Scenario: Home appliances contain onboard intelligence that receives signals from Xcel Energy and can reduce demand when the grid is under stress. • Consumers automatically pre-program appliances to turn on when prices are lower. • Creates options for managing bills and energy consumption habits

  20. Added green power sources High-speed, networked connections Plug-in hybrid electric cars Customer interaction with utility Real-time and green pricing Signals Smart thermostats, appliances and in-home control devices Smart House

  21. Plug-in Hybrid EVs (PHEV) Scenario: A PHEV is capable of both charging from and discharging power to the grid. • Utilities may pay consumers to “borrow” PHEV energy storage in times of need • PHEVs can also serve as back-up generation for homeowners • Utilities can offer incentives to motivate charging strategies with environmental benefits

  22. The Smart Grid offers multiple benefits for consumers, environmentalists, and the energy industry as a whole…

  23. Smart Grid Benefits

  24. Investment • Approximately $60 to $100 million • Cost is offset by joint funding from partners and contributions of: • Utility hardware • IT hardware • Software • Labor resources

  25. Timeline

  26. In Conclusion • It won’t happen all at once: • Smart Grid will be an evolution with long-term implications. • Next steps: collaborate with customers, shareholders and regulators to put scope and final designs in place. • Start up costs involved; but savings expected in the long run. • Solid focus will remain on customer choice.

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