Situational Intelligence Aids Preparation for the Next Sandy
March 27, 2014 in Energy , Analysis , Featured , Feature
Situational Intelligence Aids Preparation for the Next Sandy

Severe weather – you can find it every day on the Weather channel, moving across America as large storms (often with tornadoes) that pose a direct threat to the lives and power supply for thousands of utility customers. Space-Time Insight situational intelligence helps utilities rapidly repair outages caused by severe weather. A 10-day outage for 288,000 customers: The $138 million bottom line A serious storm with major outages is expensive. Major events such as Hurricane Sandy can cost in t...

New NREL Facility in Denver Aimed at Smart Grid Research
March 15, 2013 in Energy
New NREL Facility in Denver Aimed at Smart Grid Research

A new, $135 million research laboratory at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) in Golden will be a one-of-a-kind facility, enabling researchers to test the impact of new devices and renewable-energy sources on the nation’s electricity grid in a controlled environment, NREL says. The electrical connections in the building will be capable of handling up to 1 megawatt of power, according to NREL officials. The project will enable researchers to test what happens to the nation’s elect...

Achieving Model-Based Design for the Smart Grid
November 12, 2012 in Energy , Sensors , Featured , Feature
Achieving Model-Based Design for the Smart Grid

Smart Meters and SCADA Contribute a Big Data Perspective Smart meters and intelligent electronic devices provide granular data about the state of the utility network in near real-time. The availability of such data is in no small part what is making the smart grid, well, smart. Now, this data is being harnessed by utilities for greater customer insight and designs that are informed by performance. In one sense, the smart-grid is a dynamic real-time system that adapts and heals as condition...

Sewer Heat Recovery Provides Low-Cost Recycled Energy
October 24, 2012 in Energy , Water , Featured , Feature
Sewer Heat Recovery Provides Low-Cost Recycled Energy

In every urban area, heat that humans have generated to shower, wash clothes, cook, and so on flows underground — in the sewers, making them very warm. Today, sewers represent the largest source of heat leakage in buildings. Even toilet water, which is at room temperature, is warm compared to the ground. Sewer air, pipe material (and thus conductivity), surrounding soil type, and other factors also affect the final temperature of waste water, according to Genevieve Tokgoz, Project Engineer in th...

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Video: Crashes Drop Measurably After Rural Road Safety Improvement Project on US 521 in Lancaster County

Video: Crashes Drop Measurably After Rural Road Safety Improvement Project on US 521 in Lancaster County

Redevelopment of Horseshoe Bay Terminal

Redevelopment of Horseshoe Bay Terminal

June Issue 2026

June Issue 2026