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Accelerate Adoption of an Interoperable Smart Grid. Smart Grid Design & Implementation March 28, 2014 University of Florida, Gainesville, FL. Why Achieve Interoperability. Reducing the distance to integrate Reduces installation and integration costs
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Accelerate Adoption of an Interoperable Smart Grid Smart Grid Design & Implementation March 28, 2014University of Florida, Gainesville, FL
Why Achieve Interoperability • Reducing the distance to integrate • Reduces installation and integration costs • Creates well-defined points in a system for new applications • Enables substitution of automated components • Provides an upgrade path that preserves system operation • Increases opportunity for multiple vendors to compete • Allows for easier integration of new capabilities & features
Enabling Interoperable Solutions • The modernized electrical power grid is expanding • SGIP eases Smart Grid growing pains by • Comprehending customers’ requirements • Engaging all stakeholders to identify and solve critical problems • Encouraging practical implementations • Overseeing the path to interoperability through Smart Grid standards for hardware, software and systems
Smart Grid Interoperability Panel orchestrates the work behind power grid interoperability
SGIP Reduces Risks and Costs • Optimizes resources and time • Avoids proprietary vendor lock-in • Helps build technology roadmaps • Simplifies decision making SGIP is a collaborative, transparent, and trusted forum to share standardsinformation and practical, hands-on knowledge about deployments from industry experts.
SGIP Members • Electric Utilities • Investor Owned Utilities, Rural Electric Cooperatives, Municipal • Renewable Power, Transmission System Operators, Retail, Financial Market • Manufacturers • Appliance, Industrial, Vehicle, Power Equipment, Communications, Information Technology, Integrators • Associations and Standards Development Orgs (SDOs) • Governments & Regulators • Federal, State and municipal/city agencies
SGIP U.S. Government Members • Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) • Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) • National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) • Department of Energy (DOE) • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) • National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) • Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) • Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) • Sandia National Laboratories (SNL)
SGIP Academic Members • California State University – Chico • College of Engineering, Computer Science & Construction • Carnegie Mellon University • University of Illinois • Coordinated Science Laboratory • University of Texas – El Paso • Regional Cyber & Energy Security (RCES) Center • University of Tokyo • Power Systems Engineering Research Center (PSERC)
SGIP Member Groups Membership Domain Expert Working Groups (DEWGs) Priority Action Plans (PAPs) Standing Member Committees Wireless Comm - 02 Wind Plant Comm - 16 Architecture Building to Grid Energy Storage Interconnect - 07 Industry to Grid Cybersecurity Facility Smart Grid Info Std - 17 Home to Grid Implementation Methods Distribution Grid Mgmt - 08 Wholesale Demand Response - 19 Vehicle to Grid Testing & Certification Standard DR & DER Signals - 09 Green Button ESPI Evolution - 20 Transmission & Distribution Map IEEE 1815 to IEC 61850 - 12 Business & Policy Weather Info - 21 Distributed Renewables, Generation & Storage Power Line Comm - 15 EV Fueling Submetering - 22 Work Products Conceptual Models & Roadmaps Standards Evaluations Catalog of Standards Requirements Use Cases Whitepapers
For More Information Contact: Patrick Gannon: pgannon@sgip.org 941-357-6224 Visit www.sgip.org Talk to us today!