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Seminar - 020615


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The Real Reasons We Must Have a Smart Grid for the 21st Century

February 6, 2015
ME Lecture Hall
1300

Dr. Merwin Brown

Co-Director, Electric Grid Research (EGR) for the California Institute for Energy and Environment (CIEE), University of California

Abstract

The “smart grid” is a must is for keeping the lights on and electricity prices in check for the early 21st century. The reasons have their roots in trends that started in the 1960s in the electricity industry, largely driven by energy-related public policies responding to changing circumstances in the environment, economics, fuel supplies, technologies and electricity usage practices. By the end of the 20th century, the ways electric systems were planned, owned, built, operated, regulated, used, and bought and paid for would never be the same. The 21st century electric grid owner, operator, planner and regulator face growing uncertainty, complexity, inadequacy, conflict, and the need for flexibility, robustness, real-time situation awareness, probabilistic forecasting and rapid response. No longer can the grid planners and owners “build” their way out of these problems using traditional wires, towers and power plants alone. New technologies will be needed to make grid planning, permitting, building and operating easier and less costly, especially technologies that make the grid smarter.

The choice in the late 19th century of the alternating current (AC) electric grid, which was promoted by Westinghouse and Tesla and became the grid of the 20th century, instead of the direct current (DC) grid, championed by Edison, was enabled by electric transformer technology. Similarly, the emergence of electronic technology, essentially and ironically about the time the problematic trends began for the 20th century grid, is enabling the smart grid needed for the 21st century.

This lecture will examination significant events and trends in the electric industry community that over the last 5 decades exerted a compounding influence of growing complexities and uncertainties for our electric institutions, and their infrastructure and its operation. Examples of key new technologies being developed as solutions will be described.

Biography

Dr. Merwin Brown, is Co-Director of Electric Grid Research (EGR) for the California Institute for Energy and Environment (CIEE), University of California.  EGR conducts technology research to modernize electric grids for implementing California’s environmental policies. Dr. Brown currently manages a team of experts at CIEE who are helping to develop and commercialize new technologies for the modern electric grid needed to meet California’s aggressive energy-policy goals. The team develops, administers, and conducts R&D programs for reliable, safe, affordable, and environmentally sound transmission and distribution systems. Dr. Brown’s comprehensive knowledge of electric utilities and of new and emerging utility technologies is derived from 40 years of experience with firms such as Pacific Gas and Electric Company, Arizona Public Service, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. He has managed private and public-interest technology R&D programs valued at up to $50 million per year with groups as large as 100 scientists and engineers. He has managed individual R&D projects as large as $20 million. Dr. Brown has extensive training and experience in strategic business planning and has held advisory positions for many electricity industry organizations. He is a member of the US Department of Energy Advisory Committee (in 2nd term) and chairman of Energy Storage subcommittee. He has served as an Arizona Solar Energy Commissioner, on the Board of the American Council for an Energy Efficiency Economy, and with groups from the Electric Power Research Institute and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. He has numerous technical publications and presentations to his credit, and holds B.S. and Ph.D. degrees in nuclear engineering from Kansas State University.

POC

Dr. Daniel A. Nussbaum
51 
Principal, Energy Academic Group
Monterey CA 93943
Phone: 831-656-2387
Mobile: 831-324-3228
Email: dnussbaum@nps.edu

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