• COVID-19
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Events
  • Industries
  • Partners
  • Products & Services
  • Contribute
  • Webinars

Aerospace

  • Québec’s CloudOps Will Build Telesat LightSpeed’s Cloud Network
  • Myriota and Goanna Ag Team Up on IoT Agriculture Solutions
  • Fleet Picks Swissto12 to Deliver Additively Manufactured All-Metal Patch Antennas

Chemical

  • POWER magazine and Chemical Engineering magazine announce Eastman Chemical as the Host Chemical Process Industries (CPI) Sponsor for the 5th annual Connected Plant Conference
  • Evonik deepens partnership with IBM to accelerate AI implementation
  • Achieving Plant Efficiency – the Digital Way

Cybersecurity

  • House Passes Eight Bipartisan Cyber, Homeland Security Bills
  • Biden Administration Targets Electric Utilities For Cybersecurity Protections
  • White House Attributes SolarWinds Hack To Russian Agency

Healthcare

  • CISA Services In High Demand Related To COVID Vaccine Response
  • AI tool detects COVID-19 by listening to patients’ coughs
  • Printing Wearable Sensors Directly onto Skin

Oil & Gas

  • Globalstar Wins Asset Tracking Order from Brazilian Oil and Gas Company
  • Cybersecurity: Continuous Vigilance Required
  • Repsol and Microsoft renew partnership developing AI-powered digital solutions

Power

  • POWER magazine and Chemical Engineering magazine announce Eastman Chemical as the Host Chemical Process Industries (CPI) Sponsor for the 5th annual Connected Plant Conference
  • Self-Tuning Artificial Intelligence Improves Plant Efficiency and Flexibility
  • How to Put the Power Grid to Work to Prevent Wildfires

Transportation

  • Swarm CEO Sara Spangelo Sets Disruptive Pricing on New Satellite IoT Service
  • Trump Issues Cyber Security Plan For Maritime Transportation System
  • Sabic Launches New Compounds for Automotive Radar Sensors

Webinars

  • Anticipating the Unknowns: Accelerating Incident Response Without Losing Control
  • Industrial Endpoint Protection in Operational Technology
  • Known and Unknown: Putting a Stop to OT and IT Threats Before they Act

Sign up today for our free weekly e-letter

sign up
CONNECTING INNOVATIONS
WITH INSIGHT
SIGN UP
LOG IN
  • Aerospace
    Québec's CloudOps Will Build Telesat LightSpeed's Cloud Network
    Read story View all articles
  • Chemical
    POWER magazine and Chemical Engineering magazine announce Eastman Chemical as the Host Chemical Process Industries (CPI) Sponsor for the 5th annual Connected Plant Conference
    Read story View all articles
  • Cybersecurity
    House Passes Eight Bipartisan Cyber, Homeland Security Bills
    Read story View all articles
  • Healthcare
    CISA Services In High Demand Related To COVID Vaccine Response
    Read story View all articles
  • Oil & Gas
    Globalstar Wins Asset Tracking Order from Brazilian Oil and Gas Company
    Read story View all articles
  • Power
    POWER magazine and Chemical Engineering magazine announce Eastman Chemical as the Host Chemical Process Industries (CPI) Sponsor for the 5th annual Connected Plant Conference
    Read story View all articles
  • Transportation
    Swarm CEO Sara Spangelo Sets Disruptive Pricing on New Satellite IoT Service
    Read story View all articles
Power
December 22 2020 4:32 pm

The Electric Utility’s New Frontier: No-Code Energy AI on Demand

S

Sayonsom Chanda

In light of the ongoing COVID-19 crisis, the energy industry saw surplus supply and a change in usage patterns in 2020, to which it had to adapt painfully. Utility crews had to deal with a tedious hurricane season, with socially distant, limited staff. Artificial intelligence (AI) could have played a role in prioritizing essential tasks for more satisfied employees. AI-driven vegetation management can reduce unplanned power outages, and reduce millions of dollars in operations and maintenance costs, while bolstering customer satisfaction. 

Given the widespread changes in our grid infrastructure, databases will not only fail to extract value from the 21st-century data streams, but they might fail to function. The industry has seen record numbers of sensors, solar panels, electric cars, stronger ransom, Internet of Things, and advanced metering infrastructure data floods through the 5G networks to the utilities.

The number of parallel and orthogonal advances–whether it is in computing, data processing, or sensors–is hard to keep up with, especially if one is an energy professional, which itself is very demanding. The simultaneous profusion of new technologies makes us wonder which to choose appropriately, a sort of buyer's dilemma. 

Thus, there is a need to streamline the AI applications for energy industry users. Such focused AI for energy professionals can be called Energy AI. The complex development and operations (DevOps), and strenuous data science, can be automated and tucked behind the scenes. A user from the energy domain can use AI without becoming a cloud-computing cybersecurity expert while losing sight of why she or he began working on the cloud-computing project in the first place.

Why Widespread AI Adoption Is Taking Longer Than Anticipated

The lack of explainability is one thing holding back widespread AI adoption in heavily regulated industries, such as the energy industry. Regulators and lawmakers need to know what's inside the black box because they are the ones liable for every loss, answerable for any adversity. As human decision-makers, we all prefer complete, understandable, unambiguous information, and develop rationale and reasoning around it.

The power industry is a universe of its own. It is an entanglement of precision systems, lock-stepped and synchronized to serve the rest of the world. It has taken centuries of human enterprise and genius to build the energy industry of today. It is robust and reliable, though very sensitive to perturbations. AI's lack of transparency on how it works scares off practitioners in the power industry. Also, it means that AI will not function within the enormous diversity of contexts within which energy professionals work. There needs to be an AI solution tailored to every role and responsibility of an energy industry worker.

AI, however, is fundamentally only accurate as its training data sources, scenarios, and use-cases are extracted. Thus, models trained to work in the Arctic cold deserts will not fly in the sub-Saharan energy networks. Human data-labelers' pre-existing biases, their experiences (or limitations thereof) can seep into the training process. Data might be over-sampled or under-sampled. The natural language processing that transcribes meeting notes or translates Mandarin to Swahili does not parse "CAN not working–stop production now," where CAN stands for control area network in the car manufacturing industry. Nor does it understand that a line worker wants specific types of cable configurations when she or he requests "Osprey" and "Dove."

Another major bottleneck in AI's integration with the energy industry is unclear boundaries between automation and artificial intelligence. Many industry workers–especially workers in more manual and physical work roles–fear that robots, with their mechanical arms, AI-minds, above-human capabilities, and of course, unsolvability–will take billions of jobs away. Unions harbor their fears and slow down the adoption of new processes. There needs to be a shift in the mindset–that AI is an empowering tool, like a car or a pen, that can uplift humans by being an extension of their brain. It must also be highlighted that AI and all its ever-evolving data-labeling tasks has created more manual jobs in the computer industry instead of eliminating them.

Implementation of Digital Solutions Are Instrumental

Hurricane Ivan hit the Southeast in 2004. In the state of Alabama alone, 800,000 customers lost power for more than two weeks. The following year, Hurricane Katrina left 550,000 customers in Alabama in the darkness for a week and a half. In 2020, Hurricane Sally affected 300,000 customers, but only for three days. What made the difference between Katrina and Sally in decreasing the customer outage time from weeks to days? The power company went fully digital, making the before-, during-, and after-the-storm preparations more efficient, and most importantly, providing a quicker turnover rate.

Energy AI is artificial intelligence demystified, attenuated to energy-related problems, and accessible for power and energy professionals. Every business that is dependent on energy can use Energy AI confidently to prognosticate power interruptions, achieve peak productivity as individuals and teams, and in general, improve continuity of power supply to all downstream customers and business processes.

AI does not have extraterrestrial origins. On the blue marble, AI was born here to solve real-world challenges that limit human abilities–whether personal or professional. It is now upon us, across several professions, to look beyond AI's silver bullet expectations and think beyond insurmountable computer science chops; one needs to leverage AI.

How the energy industry adopts AI today will shape human lives for the next hundred years. Just as steam engines led to power plants in the James Watt-era, who knows if silly Snapchat AI filters will one day correctly predict a power outage months in advance, helping a hospital avert a backup power crisis and save a life.

–Sayonsom Chanda, PhD is CEO of Sync Energy AI. Sync Energy AI is an analytics software suite that can be customized for different engineering or decision-making roles within electric utilities.

Sign up today for our free weekly e-letter

sign up

Aerospace

Chemical

Cybersecurity

Healthcare

Oil & Gas

Power

Quiz

Transportation

Webinars

About Us

IIoT Connection delivers the latest news, trends, insights, events and research surrounding the dynamic and disruptive Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) marketplace. Brought to you by the publisher of must-read publications Defense Daily, OR Manager, POWER and Chemical Engineering, as well as the conference producers of SATELLITE, Global Connected Aircraft Summit, Connected Plant Conference and ELECTRIC POWER, IIoT Connection is committed to providing the most comprehensive compilation of products and services dedicated to the Industrial Internet of Things. Key verticals with associated products and services include: aerospace, chemical, cybersecurity, healthcare, oil & gas, power, and transportation.


Advertise

  • Privacy Policy
© 2021 Access Intelligence, LLC - All Rights Reserved.
  • × UPS Partners with Wingcopter to Develop, Certify Drone Delivery Fleet
    Read story View all articles
  • × How Industrial Managers Can Identify and Prevent Failures in Facilities
    Read story View all articles
  • × Federal Agencies Partner To Improve Cyber Security Cooperation In Energy Sector
    Read story View all articles
  • × New service lines can create opportunities for ORs
    Read story View all articles
  • × Equinor and Shell to collaborate on digital solutions
    Read story View all articles
  • × Dobroflot to Manage Fuel Savings With IOT Solution By Orange Business Services
    Read story View all articles
  • × The Future of 5G & IoT Technologies in the Transportation Industry
    Read story View all articles
  • ×
    Read story View all articles
  • ×
    Read story View all articles
  • ×
    Read story View all articles
  • ×
    Read story View all articles
  • ×
    Read story View all articles
  • ×
    Read story View all articles
  • ×
    Read story View all articles
  • ×
    Read story View all articles
  • ×
    Read story View all articles
  • ×
    Read story View all articles