Analyzing big data: Data analytics leads to grid load predictions

Siemens Magazine | Sep 24, 2020 at 3:21 PM

Poul Berthelsen knows what it means to be a pioneer. A project manager at Konstant Net since 2004, he has seen the Danish grid operator roll out smart meters all over eastern Jutland between 2010 and 2014 – far earlier than other utility providers. The 225,000 smart meters are all exactly the same, which means that Konstant's data management system receives a uniform data stream. It also means that both the meters and the management system can be updated easily. “Without visiting a single customer,” says Berthelsen, who likens the highly flexible smart meters to mobile phones, “we’ve equipped the smart meters with new functionalities several times already”.

Every hour these smart meters send millions of data sets from houses, businesses and factories to the transmission system operator Energinet’s nationwide DataHub: “Over 2.4 billion data sets in January,” Berthelsen beams, “a record”. Originally, the data was used only to account for a customer’s electricity usage and deliver correct bills, but Berthelsen started to take a closer look at how the data might be used to monitor the grid and predict future changes. What he found surprised him. Pure gold, if you look at the efficiency gains alone.

“In the past, we didn’t really know much about what was happening in the low-voltage grid between our 10/0.4-kilovolt transformer stations,” Berthelsen explains. “But when we coupled the smart meter data of diverse loads from all three phases of our transformers with the geolocation data from our geographic information system, we ‘suddenly’ knew how our stations were being used”.

Thus, Konstant Net can detect patterns in incoming error messages and use this knowledge to improve the management of the network. Berthelsen points out that Konstant Net receives many thousands of alarms on a daily basis, including numerous indications of over- or undervoltage. And more data is brought in from the interruption statistics that the supervisory control and data acquisition system provides. This knowledge, well analyzed, is worth real money: Just to know more about how one transformer station on Djursland or 5 kilometers of cable northeast of Aarhus are charged at different times can save the grid operator huge amounts. This is especially true as more and more energy consumers become producers as well.

“Twenty percent of our transformers deliver electricity backwards from customers to the electricity grid,” says Berthelsen, who was surprised to discover this high share. Through heat pumps and electric cars, consumption patterns have also changed significantly in some local areas. As a result, the power grids are exposed to challenges they were not originally built for, and the changes in the system could, without due care, threaten today’s status quo of Danes who enjoy access to power 99.99 percent of the time.

The analysis of smart meter data can help Konstant Net prepare for these upcoming challenges, but choosing the right data for analysis is key. Konstant´s smart meters deliver on average around 1.3 billion data sets per month, including data for consumption and production fluctuations over time (kilowatt-hours), maximum and minimum voltage (volts), power (kilowatts) and reactive power (kilovolt-amperes reactive).

“We can get a lot of data,” Berthelsen says, “but it’s a balancing approach: The data has to provide value and cover a need. Much of the data contained in the meters isn’t used immediately, but if we suddenly needed it due to a fault or an outage, we have it archived for 14 days”. The data is also made available for asset management and new installations.

While Poul Berthelsen scouts and manages Konstant Net´s path into the future of energy, the brain collecting and handling the huge amount of data is the Siemens EnergyIP Meter Data Management application. Siemens, in close cooperation with external partners, is constantly expanding the system to make even more data accessible and useful.

Konstant Net outsources the operation of the Meter Data Management to their supplier, Eltel Networks. The agreement they have with Eltel covers system operation, ground operations and data delivery to Konstant Net´s DataHub. “We only deal with the exceptions,” says Berthelsen, “so we can focus on using the data to optimize our grid”.

In recent years Konstant Net has started using the data to make predictions. Based on around 5 million weather-related data sets collected over a two-year period, they can estimate how the load and the voltage in parts of the main grid will develop if the sun shines tomorrow morning. Konstant´s analytical programs are standards that come on top of the EnergyIP Meter Data Management platform and its broad set of applications, and Berthelsen says they are now moving into the fourth generation and a fully functional smart grid platform. “We’re good at interpreting data and tying systems together,” Berthelsen adds. “We can draw a picture of our electricity grid, and before the end of the year we’ll be able to make further accurate predictions”. To keep up this development and make the operation of the grid better and more cost-effective, direct access to data from the meters is crucial.

Jutland might be a long way from the US East Coast, but Berthelsen self-consciously compares his operations with those of ConEdison who are currently rolling out just under 5 million smart meters in the New York City area. The American meters are transmitting their data every 15 minutes, so that it is available to the customer in almost real time. Berthelsen is convinced this will push power producers to add more functionality and develop new solutions that make use of the massive amounts of data collected.

09/19/2017

Jesper Tornbjerg, Danish Energy Association

Picture credits: Konstant Net

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