Microsoft Power and Utilities Blog

  • Microsoft and OSIsoft Present a Free Webcast on Smart Energy Reference Architecture

    In order to assist the 2010 planning the has begun in earnest at every utility company around the world, Microsoft and our partner OSIsoft are offering a complimentary Webcast on our Smart Energy Reference Architecture, on Tuesday, December 8 at 1 p.m. EST.

    clip_image002

    Microsoft’s SERA is intended specifically for working groups and utility executives who are focused on developing their utility’s smart grid blueprint. I believe they will discover SERA to be required reading for their transformation projects, as it provides a blueprint for testing the alignment of new smart grid information technology that’s available now with their existing business processes. The larger effort should be to create an integrated utility that makes the most of the new data coming from the smart grid data stream that’s about to come rushing into every utility.

    The Webcast will be hosted by Sierra Energy Group’s Warren Causey and is recommended for those utilities concerned with their strategy for the integration of virtually ever operation of their enterprise, with the end goal of better coordination of their business operations with the new demands on generation and delivery, from customers, shareholders and regulators.

    Please click here to register. I look forward to this opportunity to talk with the industry about our vision for the integrated utility of the future. – Jon C. Arnold

  • Xcel Energy Customers Now Able to Manage Home Energy Consumption with Microsoft Hohm

    The Microsoft Hohm team continues rolling out our online energy management software at utilities in North America.

    On Friday, Xcel Energy empowered its 3.4 million customers with the ability to take better control of their home energy consumption with the use of Microsoft Hohm, the online application that tracks energy use and provides personalized energy conservation recommendations.

    clip_image002Earth2Tech blogger Katie Fehrenbacher sniffed out the story on Thursday, which you can view here. And this announcement follows Seattle City Light’s implementation last month.

    We are delighted to partnering with an industry leader like Xcel Energy that continues to demonstrate excellence in customer service by providing tools and information that allows their customers to get energy-saving recommendations and lower their energy bills through solutions like Microsoft Hohm. – Jon C. Arnold

  • Microsoft’s Mundie is Focused on the World’s Energy Future and Encouraging Young People to Get Aboard

    A blog posting in the Seattle Times last week provides a good opportunity to introduce a video demo for all those interested in the topic of finding new ways to encourage today’s students to enter utility industry careers.

    Reporter Brier Dudley’s blog entry, “College road trip for Microsoft’s research chief,” describes how our Chief Research and Strategy Officer Craig Mundie has been hitting the road, sharing various technology demonstrations at colleges and universities around the world. He’s demonstrating the future of technology and its applications to tomorrow’s challenges – the very challenges that today’s student’s will be facing as they advance through their career.

    In one presentation, Craig demonstrates how people will use new computerized work spaces to display and understand the actions of a single wind turbine in a windmill fleet. The effective operation of the windmills within a supporting fleet of carbon producing generators will depend on the advanced computational capabilities of information technology. clip_image002

    To see our view of this future dynamic, check out the video titled “Mundie shares how new technology will help solve world problems,” to view his depiction of how tomorrow’s utility information worker will interact, interpret and act upon the information that will drive energy production.

    For those young people thinking about their future in the energy industry, this one video might encourage their pursuit of this career path. It might also help utility companies solve the imminent Brain Drain that’s expected as aging utility workers retire, while simultaneously improving operational efficiency of new energy resources. It’s a powerful demonstration of Microsoft’s concern for the needs of the utility industry going forward. – Jon C. Arnold

  • Water, Water, Everywhere: Using Information Technology to Address Water Industry Issues

    There's no doubt this blog has focused recently on issues related to the smart grid. Between the launch of Hohm and the Smart Energy Reference Architecture, we've been busy, as energy issues seem to be where a lot of people are expending tremendous excitement and energy.

    However, this focus in one area can't cause us to neglect significant issues in yet another. We need to acknowledge that, just as we need to address future demand electricity for now, we also need to address future need for water.

    Worldwide, water issues are a front and center topic. Whether it is in Spain where water is the new battle ground, the water restrictions in Australia, or the issues in the United States, where California, Texas, and Georgia have all dealt with severe and lingering droughts in recent years. I'm sure there are dozens of other large and small scale water shortages elsewhere around the world. That gives us reason to begin dedicating more time to introducing our blog readers to these issues, and how information technology as well as Microsoft and partner solutions, can help address these issues.

    First, however, we need to know what the issues are. The World Water Council says that within the next 50 years, the world population will increase 40-50%, resulting in increasing demand for water, with its concomitant industrialization and urbanization. Water is like electricity in that people in developed countries are very comfortable flipping a switch or turning a spigot to receive the low cost commodities of electricity and water. When water is not available, it does not flow.

    Microsoft is hearing more these days from our water customers. They are asking us to help them optimize the effectiveness of their operations, to increase the value of their investments in technology so that more of their retained earnings can invest in the expanding infrastructure they -- we -- will need in the future.  

    Like their counterparts in electric and gas, water utilities have many of the same IT needs. They need data and information that are normalized, with high-integrity. They need to model their decision processes so that improvements and efficiencies can be created. They need forced collaboration and decision support tools to accelerate better decision making.

    The overriding goal is to give people the information they need, whether they are engineers, plant operators, plant managers or VPs of operations.

    We have an extensive body of case studies on how our technology solutions have helped utilities in this chore of delivering water to their customers. We hope to highlight more of these in the coming weeks and months. The Microsoft Worldwide Power & Utilities Group is dedicated to the Power and Utilities industry, including electricity, gas and water.

    clip_image002

    One good example that I will leave you with is the work being done by Metro Vancouver Water in Canada in conjunction with our partner OSIsoft.  There they are optimizing their operations through aggregation of information and visualization. In the words of Metro Vancouver, “OSIsoft technology and Microsoft technology allows us to empower our users to make better decisions.” We love that. 

    You can view the video on the Microsoft Utilities website under videos or click on the screen shot. More water solution blogs will be on the way. – Jon C. Arnold

  • Upcoming Webinar Discusses Risk, Efficiency and Compliance for EPC Projects, 11 November

    I will be participating in a free Enterprise Informatics webinar on the topic of reducing risk, improving efficiency and ensuring compliance. I hope you can join us. Here’s the registration link.

    This webinar is very timely. With $155 billion invested world-wide in 2008 and $1 billion in federal stimulus money allocated in 2009 for green energy initiatives in the U.S., the EPC (engineer-procure-construct) industry is facing an unprecedented growth opportunity as new energy construction projects begin around the globe. The EPC industry faces the major challenge of ensuring the visibility and communication of millions of pieces of information related to thousands of milestones and accessed by hundreds of contractors over several years. In order to reduce project risk, it will be imperative to manage the complete information life cycle of project-related activity from the planning, design engineering and construction phases to the operations and maintenance phase. Program managers, project managers/leaders, design engineers, quality/safety managers, change managers and compliance managers should plan on attending

    I look forward to speaking at this webinar and answering your questions as part of the forum. – Jon C. Arnold, Microsoft Managing Director, Worldwide Utilities Industry

  • ESS-Enabled IHS Ready to Accept the Climate Challenge

    Several weeks ago I had the pleasure of attending and speaking at the ESS EXPO 09 Conference in San Antonio, Texas. For those of you not familiar with ESS (Environmental Support Solutions) they are (or at least were) a leading provider of Environmental, Health & Safety (EH&S) and Crisis Management software for compliance and sustainability as well as a Microsoft Gold certified partner.

    But what made this event even more interesting was that right before the conference IHS, another Microsoft Gold certified partner, acquired ESS, causing me to immediately wonder whether conference would be cancelled.

    The answer was a resounding “Absolutely not,” so off I went to San Antonio!

    In addition to speaking on the topic of harnessing regulatory compliance using collaboration and information sharing, IHS acquisition of ESS gave me the opportunity to meet IHS Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Jerre Stead.

    Mr. Stead is no newbie to the role as CEO: he was chairman and CEO of Ingram, Legent, AT&T’s Global Information Solutions (NCR Corporation) as well as chairman, president and CEO of Square D Company. As you can see, Mr. Stead has no shortage of experience in running companies.

    Indeed, I was very impressed with Jerre. In addition to his telling some very interesting stories about working with Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer over the years, I was very impressed with Jerre’s strategy of creating a company that provides companies worldwide with best-in-class products and services from IHS to meet the growing need to manage environmental, climate change and compliance issues – all from a single provider. The key here is not only providing the software which is ESS’ strength but also supplementing it with critical business information and analysis -- IHS’ core strength.

    As with any acquisition, a large part of the success will be IHS’ ability to retain people that helped make ESS successful. Jerre repeatedly said that he believes that people are a company’s only sustainable asset so retaining ESS’ people will surely be a key part to making the combined companies successful in the marketplace.

    With carbon legislation heating up all over the globe and the United Nations Climate Change Conference 2009 (COP15) right around the corner, I for one believe that IHS will be well positioned to fill the vital needs of the power industry as much of the burden of CO2 reductions has fallen on this industry. There’s no better time to have a partner like IHS – strengthened by the good folks at ESS – ready to help. – Jon C. Arnold

  • Addressing Societal Challenges

    We at Microsoft invest a significant amount of time thinking about how technology can address really tough societal challenges such as health care, education, workforce development and of course, energy and the environment.

    For energy and the environment we work to support the continuing movement toward a clean energy ecosystem where information technology empowers people and organizations with the software tools they need to increase energy efficiency. We believe IT accelerates the innovation and deployment of clean energy sources. You can learn more about Microsoft efforts to address the difficult challenges by clicking here. – Jon C. Arnold

  • Riding the Momentum Wave: Microsoft Delivers Hohm, SERA, Windows 7

    It’s my hope that our power and utilities customers are feeling the momentum from a wave of new Microsoft solutions and thought leadership documents that are geared toward helping them make the transformation to the Smart Energy Ecosystem. It’s truly an exciting time!

    Yesterday, Microsoft released Windows 7 (more on that in a later blog).

    And that follows the release of Microsoft Hohm several months ago and the Microsoft Worldwide Utilities group release two weeks ago of the Microsoft Smart Energy Reference Architecture (SERA), a 130-page document intended to help utilities understand how Microsoft technologies address their implementation of the smart energy ecosystem. 

    clip_image002The media’s reaction to our SERA announcement has been outstanding. At least 12 articles have been published to date and there are more to come, in major publications, in coming days and weeks.

    To give you a quick overview, I think the quote below from a story on Smart-Grid.TMCnet.com does a great job of summing up the reaction so far:

    “No vendor has all the answers, and each must play to its native strengths. In Microsoft’s case, SERA is the next step along the way to a totally integrated, end-to-end smart grid ecosystem. SERA addresses the network environment, but also ties in neatly to Microsoft’s Hohm initiative, which my ICP partner, Shidan Gouran, wrote about here last week. On its own, Hohm competes directly against Google (News - Alert) PowerMeter, but that’s where the comparison ends. Google is not a data network play, but Microsoft is. In the scenarios where a utility is deploying both Hohm and SERA, Microsoft will truly have it all, and I have no doubt they will get their share of the end-to-end market.”

    Well put.

    In the interest of full disclosure: It’s amazing to me that the quote above was written by another “Jon Arnold,” the co-founder of Intelligent Communications Partners, and no relation to me. What are the odds that two people would have the same name, same spelling (Jon Arnold) and be involved in the evolution of the Smart Grid? Truly amazing! Someone should blog on that! -- Jon C. Arnold

  • Microsoft Worldwide Utilities Group Releases Architecture Vision for Smart Energy Ecosystem

    Our phones have been ringing ringing off the hook with utilities interested in learning more about the press release we put out yesterday announcing our release of the Microsoft Smart Energy Reference Architecture (SERA), a 130 page document that is intended to help utilities understand how Microsoft technologies address their implementation of the smart energy ecosystem.  image

    We’ve previously talked in this blog about how utilities will need to integrate every operation of their enterprise and we’ve been working hard to spell out the nuts and bolts of that need, as well as the technologies they could deploy in that effort. But, we admit, our musings have been coming in bits and pieces. It was high time we rolled them all up in one place.

    The Microsoft SERA is our comprehensive view providing our partners and power and utilities customers the details of how the Integrated Utility of the Future could work. It identifies an architecture the utilities could use to build a solid foundation and validate the steps that utilities take in developing their own smart energy infrastructure.

    We realize that every utility is different, not only in their unique business models, but also in the design, hardware and software of their information technology systems as well as the regulatory models that oversee their business In fact, we’d be willing to venture that nearly every utility has, in one shape or form, it’s own Smart Grid working group that’s hashing out their company’s vision of capabilities and investments needed to implement a smarter grid and workflow.

    The Microsoft SERA is intended specifically for these groups. We hope they see SERA as required reading as it offers a specific vision to utilities, providing them with a method of testing the alignment of information technology with their business processes to create an integrated utility.

    We are aware that utilities worldwide are discussing such projects, as governments around the world show interest in funding national smart grid stimulus programs. To qualify for these programs, utilities will need to demonstrate that they have a sound, tested technology plan that will help them implement such smart energy systems. It’s our hope that, by learning more about Microsoft and industry partners’ technologies through our Smart Energy Reference Architectures, utilities will be able to implement solutions faster and more reliably than they could with other solutions that aren’t as well integrated or adaptable to utilities' particular needs. As we’ve said before, Microsoft technology is in place in some form at nearly every utility company around the world.  It is only natural then that utilities might have interest in maximizing those investments, and ensure that they integrate with their other in-place technologies.

    We’ll definitely be writing more about SERA in coming days and weeks, but in the meantime, we’d like to hear from those Smart Grid working groups out there. Take a look at the document and provide us your feedback. This is a living document, particularly where standards and common interfaces are discussed. We’d like to learn more about your view on these matters, to make this document as complete as possible. And if you want a presentation on the SERA, we’d be happy to offer that too. In the meantime, please enjoy this first cut at a complete vision for what the smart energy information technology systems of the future will look like. Let the discussions begin! – Larry Cochrane, Senior Technology Strategist, Microsoft Worldwide Utilities

  • Seattle City Light Ushers in New Era of Home Energy Management, Offers Microsoft Hohm to its Customers

    It’s a proud day for us here at Microsoft as Seattle City Light announced today that it will offer its customers the ability to link their electricity consumption data with Microsoft Hohm, the online application that tracks energy use and provides personalized energy conservation recommendations.

    It’s only fitting that Seattle City Light became the first as many Microsoft employees are customers of Seattle City Light. You can read more about the announcement here, here and here.

    There are a number of other utilities across the United States who are working with us to offer Hohm to their customers and we look forward to making several more announcements in the future. Hohm will be a valuable component of a utility’s ability to take energy efficiency to the next level for consumers and eventually create demand response opportunities.

    Announcements and partnerships like today's will make all of this possible. – Jon Arnold

  • Carbon Capture and Sequestration is Real Option, But Will Costs Constrain Development?

    While Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) is viewed by many as a pie in the sky solution to the challenges of CO2 emissions it is receiving more attention now that policy makers are focused on the climate change issue worldwide.

    CCS uses various techniques to scrub and capture CO2 from generation plant flue gasses, and then pipes the CO2 to an underground cavern or ships it for deep ocean storage. It’s costly, but has proven effective and may help policy makers achieve their goals.

    In the United States, the Waxman-Markey Climate Bill (H.R.2454) passed the U.S. House of Representatives a few months back. Globally, general concern over climate is driving the discussions that will be taken up at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen in December. Similar carbon reduction legislation either exists or is underway in other G-20 countries such as UK, Germany, Japan, and Norway.

    As mentioned, CCS is not entirely new. In Norway, Statoil’s Sleipner West oil and gas field in the North Sea has been sequestering CO2 since 1996. A map of existing and proposed CCS locations is maintained by the Scottish Center for Carbon Storage, School of Geosciences, University of Edinburgh. Simply perusing the listed pushpins provides a view of the large number of new initiatives that soon will be established.

    Microsoft partner Alstom and its customer AEP  have moved the commercialization of CCS one step closer to reality with the successful demonstration of the AEP Mountaineer Plant CCS Project. Philippe Joubert, Alstom EVP and President of the Alstom Power Systems business pointed out on a recent CNBC interview that coal and oil are such a large part (60%) of the global energy mix that CCS will be an unavoidable enabler.

    CCS projects have experienced one critical stumbling block: funding. CCS implementations can exceed $1 billion – an investment amount that few utilities can afford, especially with a technology that is not fully proven. It is significant that the EU, the U.S., and Canada have begun allocating funds to further the development of this fledgling technology. The EU established a $1.46B CCS stimulus fund to demonstrate the technology in coal fired power plants. The US has identified $3.5B in stimulus funding for CCS and Secretary Chu has restarted the FutureGen Alliance project. Canada has set aside $650M and Australia is investing $1.2B. The level of these investments is unprecedented.

    Still, the question remains: Will CCSS really take off?

     In Norway, policy makers set their carbon tax at $50 per metric ton, a figure which significantly increased the incremental cost of energy. With this added cost, the economic business justification for CCS is evident.

    But if carbon credits cost only $20 per metric ton, will the marginal cost justify the cost of CCS? Or, will generating companies be better off to rely on the emissions allowances? These trade-offs are not quite so clear given current CCS cost projections. We need rapid advances in reducing CCS costs to ensure broad adoption of the technology. The large number of new demonstration projects and the various government stimulus funding sources should help accelerate the understanding of commercial production costs.

    Regardless, some issues will remain. The US Senate may help support the financial case because they are looking at more stringent targets than those in the House bill. The environmental impact of sequestered carbon still is a concern to some. However, it is clear that unfettered CO2 plant emissions are not sustainable. Based upon the success of StatOil’s Steiner West field, and of the Alstom/AEP Mountaineer Project, CCS technology appears viable, and commercial availability may not be as far off as you think!

     

  • Microsoft Hohm Included in Wall Street Journal Story on Smart Grid

    In one of its frequent updates on Smart Grid developments, Monday’s Wall Street Journal story “Stimulus Funds Speed Transformation Toward ‘Smart Grid’” includes mention of home energy management solution, Microsoft Hohm, although the reporters didn’t call it out by its name.

    All in all, it’s a decent story on how $4.5 billion in smart grid funding included in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act is being viewed by companies with component parts for the coming smart energy ecosystem.

    Our partner Pcubed is worth mentioning here as they are helping companies navigate the complex application process for federal funding assistance for renewable energy and smart grid projects. They are using the new Microsoft solutions, Stimulus360, to help organizations that allocate and receive ARRA funds to monitor progress, submit reports, and provide intuitive views of the data for different audiences as they work to accomplish their ARRA goals.  The situation we all want to avoid is a delay in the implementation of Smart Grid projects once the funding is received because systems are not in place to provide the tracking, compliance and reporting needed. The combination of Pcubed and Stimulus 360 can help avoid the “be careful what you ask for” scenario! – Jon Arnold

  • More on Microsoft Products' Contribution to Sustainability

    We’ve touched on a few occasions in this blog about how software can contribute to utilities’ continuing efforts to achieve sustainable and be responsible stewards of the environment.  A couple of past blogs come to mind, here and here and here.

    Also, Microsoft’s Environmental Sustainability Group also publishes the Software Enabled Earth Environmental Sustainability Blog. They recently touched on our Energy Delivery & Smart Grid Solutions which is a link you might want to check out. - Jon Arnold

  • Key Technology for Connecting the Integrated Utility of the Future Gets Even Better!

    We have written before how important collaboration and knowledge management is becoming in the Power & Utilities Industry worldwide.  It’s a key component of our strategy for creating the integrated Utility of the future -- an integration of IT and operational systems that readily presents information to users based upon their needs rather than application architecture.

    Whether a company is growing customer relationships, accelerating innovation, driving corporate performance, managing governance, risk and compliance or improving operations, SharePoint has become a key enabling platform for the Utility enterprise. We have written about this before in our white paper which can be downloaded here.

    While SharePoint has become a key enabling technology across the Utility ecosystem, it’s important to understand what the product roadmap looks like and what the next wave of innovation is that will help accelerate the journey to the integrated Utility of the Future and allow us to be successful in creating things like the smart grid, optimizing the generation portfolio with renewables and dealing with the aging workforce.

    A good peek into what’s next can be found in J. Peter Bruzzese’s Infoworld column entitled “An early look at SharePoint 2010. This once SharePoint “avoider” he has some very good insights on the next version coming out next year. Enjoy. - Jon

  • Way Cool! StreamInsight Public Beta Now Available for Smart Grid Developers Interested in Managing and Gaining Insights into Data

    Last week marked an important milestone: The Community Technology Preview release of StreamInsight (formerly known as Microsoft’s platform for Complex Event Processing - CEP), is going live as a public download! You can find the download page by clicking here.

    Why is this cool?

    StreamInsight provides a solution for continuous and incremental processing of unending sequences of events (that’s a mouth full, to say the least!) from multiple sources with near-zero latency.

    If you look at industries such as power & utilities, manufacturing, oil and gas, financial services, health care, web analytics, and IT and data center monitoring, you can start to visualize a scenario involving lots of data being generated very quickly, creating need for companies to look for patterns and events that might trigger other processes.

    An example of leveraging CEP is fielding outage events from customer meters, consolidating those events into streams supplying both Outage Management and Customer Service. Microsoft StreamInsight can be used to analyze the individual outages and identify faults, in realtime in sequence, and provide the information to downstream users – such as Outage Management. Streams can feed other streams so individual meter events showing customer outages can be consolidated and replaced at the system level with a single consolidated feeder segment outage alarm. Thus, insight from new AMI systems can be leveraged without exposing operators in the call center or control room to an avalanche of fine grained alarms.

    In a nut shell, StreamInsight allows software developers to create innovative solutions in the domain of Complex Event Processing that satisfy such needs. It enables information technology with the ability to monitor, mine, and develop insights from continuous unbounded data streams and correlate constantly changing events with rich payloads in near real time. Industry specific solution developers (ISVs) and developers of custom applications have the opportunity to innovate on and utilize proven, flexible, and familiar Microsoft technology and rely on existing development skills when using the StreamInsight platform.

    Some of the key feature areas are:

    · Derive meaningful and relevant information from data/events streams through complex patterns. These patterns can be defined using a declarative query paradigm based on well-defined streaming semantics with LINQ as query language.

    · For the development of applications, adapters, and analytics, the user can rely on well-established and powerful development frameworks and tools such as .NET, LINQ, and Microsoft Visual Studio.

    · The platform integrates with various data sources and sinks through input and output adapters. The framework to build domain-specific adapters utilizes a .NET API to make adoption of the platform easy. Independence between adapters and queries facilitates seamless integration of real-time and historical analysis.

    · The platform architecture supports a variety of deployment options, from scenarios with a low-footprint embedded option to high-end server deployments.

    · A rich set of manageability features such as a management interface, a diagnostic interface and a debugging tool are provided as part of the platform.

    This is our first public beta and we would like to invite you to try out our bits and provide feedback. The best way to communicate your feedback is to report any bugs or feature requests at SQL Server Connect. It now also includes a version and category specifically targeted for StreamInsight. All bugs, issues, and feature requests submitted through this tool will go directly to the development team.

    Along with the StreamInsight .msi you are also able to download a .zip file containing documentation (also online on MSDN) and samples. We strongly recommend that you use the samples to become familiar with our product and its capabilities. Moreover, we will guide you through various aspects of the product on our StreamInsight Blog. The StreamInsight Forum is closely monitored by the development team and provides you with a basic level of support.

    If you are interested in other SQL Server CTPs, please visit this site as well: Microsoft SQL Server 2008 R2 August CTP.

    We would like to thank you for your continued interest in StreamInsight and are very much looking forward to your experiences and feedback!

    - Jon Arnold and Larry Cochrane

More Posts Next page »

This Blog

Syndication

Tags


© 2009 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use  |  Trademarks  |  Privacy Statement
Microsoft
Page view tracker