Microsoft Power and Utilities Blog

Pebble Bed Modular Reactor Exemplifies Microsoft Innovation with Partners

In the previous blogs I wrote about the value of Microsoft’s coming together with its partners at a conference in Houston and the work that ICONICs is doing to develop innovative solutions for the utility industry.

Another good example of how our investments with partners is coming to life is the innovative work we are doing with ESTEQ Engineering and the Pebble Bed Modular Reactor Company in South Africa (PBMR). 

As electric power prices continue their move higher worldwide, many countries are re-evaluating the potential of nuclear energy as a generation source.

PBMR’s use of Microsoft high performance computing will be a go-to learning experience for every future High Temperature Reactor built because PBMR is on schedule to be the first commercial scale reactor with a closed-cycle gas turbine power conversion system in the power generation field.

clip_image002In PBMR’s case, the utility required an integrated, reliable, and easy-to-use, easy-to-administer high performance computing platform. We have a brief video and case study on it, which I’d encourage you to visit.

In sum, PBMR deployed 17 HP Proliant DL Series servers with Windows HPC to start migrating one of the applications (MSC Marc) from Linux to Windows with the help of ESTEQ Engineering. Integration, performance, stability, and ease of use on Windows proved to be excellent and now PBMR is considering moving other applications to Windows.

With the increased demand for energy and there is an increasing need to extend high performance computing to the masses for applications such as power grid analysis and situation awareness, the simulation of plant outages for re-fueling and equipment repairs and the design of complex next generation power systems in the case of PBMR.  As HPC pushes out beyond traditional supercomputing centers toward departments and divisions there is a need to speed deployment, manageability and overall ease of use. Using tools like the automated deployment servers (ADS) feature of Windows Server 2003 HPC nodes can be deployed via multicast and then managed with the cluster through Windows Computer Cluster Server’s management tools and user interface.  Plus, by deploying Operations Manager a company can monitor detailed cluster performance information in a scalable fashion throughout the enterprise.

What this means is a dramatically reduced turnaround time for customers to quickly respond to  market drivers and get meaningful results to Empower Excellence in Power & Utilities.  - Jon

Published Monday, August 04, 2008 12:26 PM by MSPowerUtilities

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About MSPowerUtilities

Welcome to the Microsoft Utilities Industries Blog! My Name is Jon Arnold and I am the Microsoft WW Utilities Industry Managing Director, one of four people who will be serving as author of this blog. Our blog aims to provide readers with frank discussions of utility industry issues and our view on them as a provider of software solutions. Blogs are often judged by their level of authenticity and the absence of marketing content. We will make every effort to shape this blog accordingly. However, and I don’t mean to be immodest here, but Microsoft software helps nearly every utility around the world run their business. If our comments on this blog provide our users with extra insight and knowledge about our products – even if some readers get turned off by inadvertent marketing – we take comfort in the fact we’re doing our job, serving our clients. But in a larger sense we think this blog will serve an important role in educating and informing most everyone, as power hungry businesses, industrial operations and consumers create ever more demand pressure, and as environmental issues, regulations and higher fuel costs squeeze utilities’ production. Just as technology has increased modern economies’ productivity over the last 25 years, so too will it address these new challenges. The Microsoft WW Utilities Team is comprised of myself, Larry Cochrane and Larry Kuhl, or, as I refer to them, Larry West and Larry East, as Larry C is in Redmond and Larry K is upstate New York. We work closely with Microsoft industry resources around the world including Ray King of the US Utilities group who resides here in sunny Florida with me. I’ll include all our bios in another post. Our goal as a team will be to offer thoughts about how utilities can use technology to improve cost efficiencies, enhance service reliability, improve customer service and add to the bottom line. Just as important, we want to provide our views on how utilities can compete in a turbulent future brought on by the carbon challenge and global supply chain competition. We will do this by changing the way people work, through the most comprehensive software they need to be successful, and thereby change the utility organization itself. We already have an extensive set of information about how we and our partners are helping utilities become more successful. You can find this information and more about the kinds of products and services provided by the Microsoft Utilities team at this link. I strongly encourage your feedback and suggestions so please, do not hesitate to contact me at: Jon.Arnold@Microsoft.com or call me at: 904-280-5406 Jon C. Arnold WW Utilities Industry Managing Director Worldwide Utilities Industry Microsoft Corporation Office & Mobile: 904.280.5406 Fax: 425. 708.5902 jona@microsoft.com On the internet at: www.microsoft.com/utilities

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