AMI experts at Portland General Electric, one of the most forward-thinking utilities in the U.S., are preparing an insightful and dynamic Learning Lab for Utilimetrics Thursday, July 28. Tentatively, the Learning Lab is divided into six segments. News Link spoke with the PGE staff members who are developing the learning lab.
The first segment will focus on smart metering at PGE. “We plan to explain the entire smart metering project,” states Dean Smith, project communications manager. “We completed the deployment and are in the operational phases. We will cover the business case, vendor selection process, meter deployment, tower and network deployment, and lessons learned getting it through to the operational phase.”
This segment will include business process improvements PGE made, including various changes that involved process automation. “These were coupled with the smart metering installation, so we could immediately leverage the benefits from the system through a series of business process improvements,” continues Smith. “We will share the benefits and value these improvements have provided, as well as some of the lessons learned.”
Eric Spack, AMI project director is the featured speaker in the first segment. Spack will discuss the AMI project, including major milestones and a major lesson learned, “plan to re-plan.” Spack will talk about the importance of communicating with customers and how to avoid generating ill will that could expand into an “opt out” initiative or consumer push-back situation. He will discuss the “care and feeding” of the call center before and after deployment.
“Another important element is focusing and prioritizing the business process and IT software development initiatives,” explains Spack. His message: “You will underestimate this effort, and you will get a late start.” He will then discuss how to recover and make sure the most critical items get done first, in order to ensure project success and maximize the return on investment.
The second segment’s focus is the mass deployment and customer relations elements of smart metering. “We will drill down to meter deployment – what the deployment practices were, how they went, what we learned, and what the customer relations component of the whole deployment process looked like,” states Smith.
Jamie Swails, manager, Network Data Operations Segment will speak in the third segment. “We will provide information on our organization and what we do,” states Swails. “We will then explain some of the lessons learned and areas of concern. For example, what is our volume of exceptions? How many people do we have dealing with exceptions? What are some of the unexpected operational impacts related to hosting the system?” Swails plans to talk about billing, since the exceptions can carry through to billing. “There were some heavy impacts to our billing department that were not anticipated as part of the project,” she explains. “Currently, we are reading 800,000+ meters over the air. We are able to provide 99 percent of the readings on-time to our billing department.” Swails will share other anticipated challenges. One relates to maintaining all of the data, such as data privacy concerns, scalability concerns, and how this amount of data will affect department heads. “I will also discuss what it means to be a steward of that meter data,” she states.
The fourth segment covers a number of subtopics, including meter data management (MDM). “We will talk about our MDM system, how the end-to-end processing of data through our MDM system into our enterprise system takes place, and what we have learned about integrating these systems together to create an effective end-to-end system,” states Smith.
The fifth segment focuses on energy recovery and related field operations. “We will talk about what we are learning about how to use the system in the field,” says Smith. Areas where PGE is receiving benefits include energy recovery, theft detection, and line losses. “We are also looking at new ways to leverage the system, such as transformer-level metering and fault detection,” he continues. “Not only do we have a business case that anticipated certain benefits tied in with business process automation, but we are finding there are other things we can do with the system that, as people become more familiar with the data and how to use it, can be of additional value on the operational side.”
Segment six is about future-related smart grid initiatives. “Here, we will share some of our smart grid thinking, such as how smart metering ties into a smart grid application, including distribution automation,” states Smith. “We are doing some pilot projects in this area.”
One of the featured speakers in this segment is Conrad Eustis, director of Retail Technology Development who will discuss the appliance’ interface. By the end of July, it should be ready to go to a standards organization. Eustis will also discuss EPRI’s “Plugfest,” which demonstrates the interoperability of the standard. And, he will talk about the future of the smart grid in general.
The Learning Lab is more than just PGE people standing up and talking, though. “We are also going to do some ‘show and tell’ on our distribution generation control center, our MDM, and other elements,” notes Smith.
Prior to the Learning Lab, PGE will ask participants about specific topics they would like covered. “We want this to be as relevant to participants as possible,” emphasizes Smith. “We will present information, and leave time for people to interact and drill down.”
And for participants who want to continue learning, on Friday, July 29 PGE operations personnel and other experts are available to meet individually with participants and discuss areas of specific interest.
The fee for participation is $295 for Utilimetrics members and $395 for nonmembers. For information or to register, click here.
Thanks to the Learning Lab sponsors: Sensus and Wellington Energy.