PrisonPlanet Forum
May 23, 2013, 04:08:31 PM *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
 
   Home   Help Login Register  
Pages: [1]   Go Down
  Print  
Author Topic: The Smart Grid is *DUAL* Probem Reaction Solution implementation!  (Read 8385 times)
Eckhart Tolle
Member
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 2,508



« on: April 14, 2009, 07:27:59 PM »

NIST Announces Three-Phase Plan For Smart Grid Standards


Interoperability standards are needed to ensure that software and hardware components from different vendors will work together seamlessly, while cybersecurity standards will protect the multi-system network against natural or human-caused disruptions.

by Staff Writers
Gaithersburg MD (SPX) Apr 14, 2009
http://www.energy-daily.com/reports/NIST_Announces_Three_Phase_Plan_For_Smart_Grid_Standards_999.html

As part of the Obama Administration's commitment to moving the nation toward energy independence, the U.S. Commerce Department's National Institute of Standards and Technology
(NIST) announced today a three-phase plan to expedite development of key standards for a Smart Grid, a nationwide network that uses information technology to deliver electricity efficiently, reliably, and securely.

The recently passed American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) contains investments critical to spurring the Smart Grid development process.

"The Smart Grid will create green jobs and stand as a cornerstone of the national effort to achieve energy independence and curb the emissions changing our climate," NIST Deputy Director Patrick Gallagher said. "We are working with a sense of urgency to expedite the development of standards critical to ensuring a reliable and robust Smart Grid."

On January 8, 2009, in a speech announcing his recovery and reinvestment plan, then President-elect Obama made the transition to the Smart Grid a high priority in his strategy to move the nation toward energy independence. The Department of Energy is the lead agency on the federal Smart Grid effort, and NIST is charged with coordinating the development of standards for the project.

NIST's three-phase approach will:

Further engage utilities, equipment suppliers, consumers, standards developers and other stakeholders to achieve consensus on Smart Grid standards. This process will include a stakeholders' summit scheduled for May 19-20 in Washington, D.C. By early fall, the process will deliver: the Smart Grid architecture;

+ priorities for interoperability and cybersecurity standards, and an initial set of standards to support implementation; and

+ plans to meet remaining standards needs.

Launch a formal partnership to facilitate development of additional standards to address remaining gaps and integrate new technologies.

Develop a plan for testing and certification to ensure that Smart Grid equipment and systems conform to standards for security and interoperability.

After issuing the initial set of priorities, standards and action plans in early fall, NIST will initiate the partnership and complete a testing-and-certification plan by the end of the year.

The Energy Independence and Security Act (EISA) of 2007 charges NIST with "primary responsibility to coordinate development of a framework that includes protocols and model standards for information management to achieve interoperability of smart grid devices and systems."

NIST will combine part of its own appropriation from the Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) with $10 million from the Department of Energy's ARRA appropriation to carry out these responsibilities.

Interoperability standards are needed to ensure that software and hardware components from different vendors will work together seamlessly, while cybersecurity standards will protect the multi-system network against natural or human-caused disruptions.

NIST recently contracted with the Electric Power Research Institute, Inc. (EPRI) to help the agency develop an interim report on Smart Grid architecture and a standards roadmap. Headquartered in Palo Alto, Calif., EPRI is an independent, nonprofit, noncommercial organization that conducts research and development relating to the generation, delivery and use of electricity.

EPRI also will support consensus-building activities to create an initial slate of Smart Grid standards. By the end of 2009, NIST plans to submit these standards for review and approval by the Federal Energy Regulation Commission, which has jurisdiction over interstate distribution and sales of electric power.

George Arnold, deputy director of NIST's Technology Services unit and formerly a vice-president at Bell Laboratories, will lead and coordinate NIST's Smart Grid efforts. Arnold previously served as chairman of the board of the American National Standards Institute, a private, nonprofit organization that coordinates voluntary U.S. standardization and conformity assessment activities.
Logged


US Map of Live Police,Fire,EMS Scanner Streams


www.radioreference.com/apps/audio/

LIVE TV WORLD NEWS STREAMS /w Chat

www.rentadrone.tv/
Dig
All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man.
Member
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 63,103



WWW
« Reply #1 on: April 14, 2009, 07:39:10 PM »

NIST Announces Three-Phase Plan For Smart Grid Standards


Interoperability standards are needed to ensure that software and hardware components from different vendors will work together seamlessly, while cybersecurity standards will protect the multi-system network against natural or human-caused disruptions.

by Staff Writers
Gaithersburg MD (SPX) Apr 14, 2009
http://www.energy-daily.com/reports/NIST_Announces_Three_Phase_Plan_For_Smart_Grid_Standards_999.html


WAKE UP!!!!!!!!!!!

The creators of the THERMAL EXPANSION excuse for why 47 story building explode into fine dust in 6 seconds will now control every breath you take!
Logged

All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
thru the matrix
Member
**
Offline Offline

Posts: 82


« Reply #2 on: April 15, 2009, 04:07:17 PM »

I must admit that I have not researched the Smart Grid "OP", so I do not yet understand their game plan, the dialectics in-play, the actors, and their end goals.   Can someone help me understand the specifics of where they are taking us and how they plan to manipulate us.  Thanks.

I did hear recently, at a conference, that they'll be able to determine the brand, make and model of each device connected to the "smart grid" by measuring that device's electronic-signature, as each device has its own unique signature.
Logged

Screenshots are now taken of all my posts immediately after publication.

Contact me anonymously at ContactMeHere
Dig
All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man.
Member
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 63,103



WWW
« Reply #3 on: April 15, 2009, 09:08:58 PM »

I must admit that I have not researched the Smart Grid "OP", so I do not yet understand their game plan, the dialectics in-play, the actors, and their end goals.   Can someone help me understand the specifics of where they are taking us and how they plan to manipulate us.  Thanks.

I did hear recently, at a conference, that they'll be able to determine the brand, make and model of each device connected to the "smart grid" by measuring that device's electronic-signature, as each device has its own unique signature.

IBM: "Let's Build a Smarter Planet"
http://forum.prisonplanet.com/index.php?topic=83532.0
Logged

All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
TelepesT
Member
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 960


Genetic Dictator


WWW
« Reply #4 on: April 15, 2009, 09:14:01 PM »

Check out this company
http://www.aclaratech.com/AclaraPLS/pages/default.aspx

They are making the hardware and software for the energy companies TWACS tech

soon there will be a great consolidation of energy  - there can be only one!

The Aclara Two-Way Automatic Communications System (TWACS) Technology is a proven, fixed-network solution that uses patented technology to transmit data over power lines. Aclara TWACS Technology offers two-way communication to electric meters and provides for timely billing, load control, demand response, and outage detection and assessment. With the system, utilities can effectively manage customer data and reduce costs while enabling innovation and providing superior customer service.

Aclara TWACS Technology is successfully deployed in a wide variety of locations – from small rural coops to large investor-owned utilities. In a consistently changing utility environment, Aclara TWACS Technology provides a solid foundation on which to build the metering solutions of today and tomorrow.


http://www.aclaratech.com/AclaraPLS/Pages/specsheets.aspx
Logged

Ten Foot Lizard Man from Planet Snickle-Snack in the POP-TART sector 
Freedom T
Even if you are a minority of one, the truth is the truth.
- Mohandas Gandhi
Southern Patriot
Member
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 1,125


Inter arma enim silent leges


« Reply #5 on: April 15, 2009, 09:48:04 PM »

They are already replacing all of the power poles where I live and installing the sensors on the lines. If you haven't seen the GE commercial, you have got to check it out. It is the scarecrow from the Wizard of Oz dancing on power lines singing "If I only had a brain". They are really pushing this shit so that people will think it is great for them and not an intrusive invasion of privacy. This grid can litterally create rolling blackouts with keystrokes if the utility were to decide that a portion of the grid was over their allotment of electricity. This could easily lead into programable thermostats in your home controlled by the utility. The technology is there to have major appliances tied into the sensor system. That is some creepy 1984 bullshit.
Oh, by the way....I think this is my 50th post so I get to be a junior member of the certified domestic terrorist club right?
Logged

Eckhart Tolle
Member
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 2,508



« Reply #6 on: April 16, 2009, 10:12:57 PM »

Vice president announces $4B in smart energy grid grants

The Associated Press

http://www.kansascity.com/news/breaking_news/story/1146399.html

Posted on Thu, Apr. 16, 2009 07:30 PM

JEFFERSON CITY | Vice President Joe Biden used a visit to a mid-Missouri transformer factory Thursday to highlight how the federal economic stimulus package is propelling a new wind-energy project and spinning off jobs.

Speaking from the factory floor of ABB Inc., Biden announced that the Department of Energy will award about $4 billion in grants under the stimulus package to improve the nation's electric grid.

The vice president is making a two-day, three-stop swing across Missouri — his first trip back to the state since the 2008 campaign.

Earlier Thursday, Biden landed at Whiteman Air Force Base, home of the B-2 bomber, to thank military members for their service. On Friday, Biden is to host a forum at the University of Missouri-St. Louis on ways to make college more affordable.

The ABB factory, located on the north side of the Missouri River just across from the state Capitol, has laid off almost one-third of its work force in the past year, leaving it with 650 employees.

The plant shut down Thursday while Biden and Commerce Secretary Gary Locke took a walking tour of the sprawling factory floor before addressing a group of about 400 employees and invited guests.

Biden touted an order for 100 ABB-built electrical transformers to be used at a $300 million wind power plant in northwest Missouri. Wind Capital Group, which plans to break ground in August on the DeKalb County project, says it will be the largest wind farm in Missouri with a capacity to provide power to about 50,000 homes.

The president of Wind Capital is Tom Carnahan, the brother of Rep. Russ Carnahan, D-Mo., and Missouri Secretary of State Robin Carnahan, who is running for U.S. Senate in 2010.

Wind Capital spokesman Tony Wyche said development of the wind farm is moving forward partly because the economic stimulus act extended a tax credit that can be used by investors in wind energy.

Biden said the Missouri wind-energy site will be designed with smart electric grid components. Among other things, smart electric grids enable consumers to better adjust their electricity use and to sell electricity back to the utility from solar panels or other home energy generators.

Under the stimulus act, Biden said the Department of Energy will award nearly $3.4 billion in grants to install smart electricity grid technology and $615 million for smart grid demonstration projects. Locke said the White House will host a forum in early May to work on the creation of industry standards for developing the smart electric grid.

Biden linked energy issues with nation's military presence in the Middle East.

"The smart electrical grid is necessary to ending America's reliance on foreign oil," Biden said.

"How many of you think we would have so many troops stationed in that area of the world if we didn't need the oil?" Biden said. "If you add the actual price of oil, it's probably $10 more a barrel just by the military we have to provide to be able to ensure those oil lanes stay open."

Earlier at Whiteman Air Force Base, Biden told a crowd of about 1,100 troops from all four branches of the military that President Barack Obama's administration is committing $25 billion in additional spending for veterans.

"All of you will one day be veterans," Biden said. "They've been forgotten a lot in the last eight years, the last 15 years."

Biden presented a Bronze Star to technical Sgt. Dave H. Townsend Jr. for heroics in Iraq.

He praised the current generation of troops as "the most powerful, most disciplined, best trained warriors America has ever produced" and pledged that the Obama administration would take care of the some 35,000 U.S. troops who have been wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Biden also acknowledged the sacrifices of families of soldiers, especially those killed in action.

"I say this from the bottom of my heart, I admire you. The president admires you," Biden said. "And now we're putting our money where our mouth is."
Logged


US Map of Live Police,Fire,EMS Scanner Streams


www.radioreference.com/apps/audio/

LIVE TV WORLD NEWS STREAMS /w Chat

www.rentadrone.tv/
CalebJamesDeLisle
Member
****
Offline Offline

Posts: 250

Without https, your not anonymous either.


« Reply #7 on: April 17, 2009, 11:41:40 PM »

Let me guess, there won't be any way to quickly change back to "dumb grid" if all this technology fails. Maybe it's the incentive we need to build a real grid, wires running house to house.

Pretty sure there won't be any trouble isolating your own power service, a great big coil of wire should do the trick. see power factor correction.

another thought,
grid based communications + "thou shalt only use the holy devices" = virus hell

govt tinkering with the grid = time to get a good liquid cooled diesel generator (liquid cooled so it doubles as a heater) Listeroids and Detroit diesels seem like good generator engine choices.
Logged

Life is short, smile more! :-D

Historically, it is when the elites begin to go after the creative people and forward thinkers that their empire fails due to lack of ingenuity.
lordssyndicate
Member
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 1,141


Stop The New World Order


WWW
« Reply #8 on: April 18, 2009, 01:47:13 AM »

Translation the ancient pre PROMIS  grid is too hard to control even with the MICs provided for by way of your friendly digital power meter.

So, now we need a grid based on Agile technologies (PROMIS's grandchild) we can selectively control so that we can wage false flag terror on sections of the grid rather than  having to expose the entire grid and thereby exposing ourselves as the real culprits of  of this power outage terror to come.

Basically they want to be able to with the push of a button - shut off this nice X block section of X community in X state  at any time they like so that they can conveniently blame it on home grown terrorists. This goes hand in hand of  why the need internet 2 up so they can say what they want and wage false flag teror on both the grid and the internet without  us being able to expose them....


Logged

"Biotechnology it's not so bad. It's just like all technologies it's in the wrong HANDS!"- Sepultura
Anti_Illuminati
Guest
« Reply #9 on: April 21, 2009, 01:53:20 PM »

Translation the ancient pre PROMIS  grid is too hard to control even with the MICs provided for by way of your friendly digital power meter.

So, now we need a grid based on Agile technologies (PROMIS's grandchild) we can selectively control so that we can wage false flag terror on sections of the grid rather than  having to expose the entire grid and thereby exposing ourselves as the real culprits of  of this power outage terror to come.

Basically they want to be able to with the push of a button - shut off this nice X block section of X community in X state  at any time they like so that they can conveniently blame it on home grown terrorists. This goes hand in hand of  why the need internet 2 up so they can say what they want and wage false flag teror on both the grid and the internet without  us being able to expose them....

Now, if 300 million people in the U.S. have your understanding, the NWO would be completely finished, they would be forced to using total violence against us.  Now as bad as that would be, we have no choice, THAT is the position that we want to force themselves into, because it is the ONLY position that can ultimately result in victory.  To do otherwise is the same thing as saying "Please RAPE ME GENTLY."  How about "F**K YOU, I'M NOT ALLOWING YOU TO RAPE ME, PERIOD."   You are 100% correct in your understanding LS.
__________________________________________________________
http://www.energypulse.net/centers/article/article_display.cfm?a_id=1748

A Useful Thing Happened on the Way to the Smart Grid: the Agile Grid

6.2.08  Stephen Hadden, Vice President, Plexus Research, Inc. Shannon Messer, Senior Consultant, R. W. Beck

The concept of an intelligent electric utility infrastructure or “Smart Grid” is attracting wide interest among utilities, consultants, regulators, and other utility stakeholders. The widespread interest, however, is accompanied by widely differing expectations about when Smart Grid will emerge. Some consultants and vendors confidently proclaim that the Smart Grid is here or “just around the corner.” Utility management and staff responsible for operating real electric systems are careful to distinguish Smart Grid fact from fiction. They understand that Smart Grid will not suddenly become available in a suite of closely bundled technologies and applications. Also, they are pragmatic about the technology needed today and in the next few years to improve distribution operations.

Indeed we may never be able to declare that we have achieved the Smart Grid. The very concept of a Smart Grid is likely to continue to evolve with the developing grid automation technology. Today’s Internet is more than the vision of the National Information Infrastructure (NII, remember that?) described 15 years ago. But no one rang a bell when we “achieved” the NII. Today’s vision of the information superhighway remains ahead of us, yet to be attained with IPv6 and other technologies. Similarly, by the time our operating electric distribution system becomes what we now call Smart Grid, the concept of Smart Grid will have been further advanced and the “finish line” will have moved ahead of us into the future.



Which Grid Has Already Arrived?

The concept of intelligent infrastructure will continue to evolve, but utilities have tangible choices now, and they do not have to wait for the Smart Grid to arrive before providing practical solutions. A viable strategy available for utilities interested in implementing a Smart Grid is to begin using existing and emerging technologies and applications to create something we might call an “Agile Grid.” Many utilities already have deployed, or are planning to deploy, key elements or components of an Agile Grid. Examples of these technologies and applications include AMI, OMS, and GIS, among others. These technologies and applications will operate in standalone mode, and will produce value that amply justifies their cost. For example, AMI, OMS and SCADA may be installed as monolithic applications with no consideration of a Smart Grid. But some utilities are using available data interfaces and protocols to link these applications, thus creating even greater value than can be achieved by operating in them standalone mode.

One view of this Agile Grid concept is illustrated in the diagram below. Many of these technologies and applications support data interfaces and protocols to exchange data and report actionable information that utilities can use now to improve reliability and plant utilization, and to better leverage their capital and operating expenditures. The figure shows many examples, but we’ll briefly explore just one that involves AMI and OMS.



OMS Is a Great Tool

Trip or lockout alarms, received from SCADA-controlled devices in substations, are confirmed events that can be manually or automatically logged into an OMS. But such automation at most installations doesn’t extend beyond the substation. Moreover, at many utilities, SCADA does not exist at all or is installed only at a few substations. So the bulk of outages, which occur on downline feeder segments and laterals, are not detected by automation. Therefore utilities traditionally rely on customers to report downline outages by calling the utility on the telephone.

Many utilities with an OMS record customer outage calls the same way they did before the OMS was installed. Before an OMS was available, trouble call reports were manually recorded by customer service representatives or by customers via an interactive voice-response (IVR) system. This process has changed little for many utilities, even after an OMS was installed, except that trouble calls are individually logged into the OMS by customer service representatives or by the IVR. The OMS matches these calls to customer and connectivity data to identify the locations of customers reporting the outage(s). The OMS uses this information to infer which protective device(s) may be tripped and to estimate the number of customers affected.

AMI Improves Agility of OMS

An OMS is a great improvement over traditional methods of outage management, but the value and functionality of an OMS are dramatically improved when it is integrated with AMI. AMI bridges the gap left by other automation (or none!) by reporting endpoint level outage information directly into the OMS.

Integrating an OMS with outage data from AMI provides faster and more comprehensive insight into which protective devices are likely to be tripped and the numbers and identities of customers affected. Depending on the latency of the AMI, outage detection from most or all of the affected endpoints can be passed to an OMS within one to five minutes of the outage event(s).

The accuracy of OMS inferences of likely tripped devices and outage areas depends on the accuracy and detail of the underlying connectivity model. The connectivity model includes customers’ supply path through individual distribution transformers, fuse cutouts, downline reclosers, and substation breakers or reclosers in any switched configuration. A more accurate model translates into faster and better assessments of the size, scope, and number of outages, which improves decisions on restoration priorities, dispatching crews, and overall effectiveness of the restoration effort.

AMI systems typically provide a capability to poll endpoints to verify that voltage (that is, service) has been restored. If it has not, AMI allows the OMS to discern nested outages and reprioritize and redispatch field crews accordingly. In this way the restoration process is further improved since utilities can confirm -- rather than have to assume -- that electric service is back on after repairs are made and the affected breaker, recloser or fuse is closed.

Agile Grid Today – Smart Grid Tomorrow

Widespread automation throughout a typical distribution system may someday be available and affordable. One of the many deliverables envisioned to be provided by Smart Grid applications is information about critical distribution functions. AMI can already provide high-low voltage alarms. AMI interfaced with an OMS can also provide very powerful outage detection, management, and restoration tools that are very effective down to the endpoint level. This may not be considered Smart Grid by some, but it is part of an Agile Grid that’s readily available to utilities today, and is a capability that didn’t exist just a few years ago.

This is the first in a series of articles on practical approaches to smart grid that utilities can initiate now. In the next article in this series, we’ll address coordination of available automation systems to substantially improve distribution load and capacity management.

http://www.energypulse.net/centers/article/article_display.cfm?a_id=1872

This is the second in a series of articles on practical approaches to the Smart Grid that utilities can initiate right now.

When Will Smart Grid Be Available?

The concept of an intelligent electric utility infrastructure or "Smart Grid" is attracting wide interest among utilities, consultants, regulators, and other utility stakeholders. This interest, however, is accompanied by widely differing expectations about when Smart Grid will emerge. Some confidently proclaim that the Smart Grid is here or "just around the corner." But utility management and staff responsible for operating real electric systems are understandably cautious. They realize that Smart Grid will not suddenly become available in a suite of closely bundled technologies and applications. And they are pragmatic about the technology needed today to improve distribution operations for the next few years.

What Grid Is Already Here?

The concept of intelligent infrastructure will continue to evolve, but utilities have tangible choices now, and they do not have to wait passively to provide practical solutions as Smart Grid develops. Utilities can begin using existing and emerging technologies and applications to create something we might call an "Agile Grid", on the way to creating a Smart Grid. Many utilities already have deployed, or are planning, key elements or components of an Agile Grid.

While there are numerous examples of these technologies and applications, in this article we discuss just one: integration of advanced metering infrastructure (AMI) with engineering analysis (EA) tools. An EA application may be operated as a stand-alone tool, with no consideration of a Smart Grid, and it will produce ample value. But some utilities are using available data interfaces and protocols to link EA to other applications to create even greater value, and this increases the utilities' agility in operating the grid: It takes them a step closer to Smart Grid.

One view of this Agile Grid concept is illustrated in the diagram below. Many of the technologies and applications shown support data interfaces and protocols to exchange data and report actionable information that utilities can use now to improve reliability and plant utilization, and to better leverage their capital and operating expenditures. The exchange between EA and AMI is shown by the dark arrow.

EA Is a Great Tool

Available EA applications are robust tools capable of performing very sophisticated analyses on personal computers. EA applications vary by vendor, but they all perform a variety of distribution simulations based on an underlying model of the utility's distribution system configuration, equipment, and loads. A utility may have several different models saved to reflect the existing system, future capital budgeting construction plans, and current and future loads for winter and summer, etc.

Distribution system models can be built and maintained in several ways. One method in widespread use is to export a detailed representation of the distribution system from the utility's GIS, and add load data to it from other sources. The data quality and detail available in these GIS exports has improved dramatically over the past few years. Many utilities, including small municipal and cooperative systems, have very detailed and accurate distribution system models. A typical distribution system model will be geographically correct and include accurate circuit configuration, equipment and device data, and detailed connectivity information by phase at the meter level. These distribution system models are also used by some OMS applications for outage analysis.

To prepare an EA study of a particular area of interest on the distribution system, utility engineers need a distribution model that represents the actual distribution configuration and system loads for the particular time period of interest. Circumstances change frequently, and utility engineers may need to update their EA distribution models by importing updates from their GIS. This is readily done.

Updating load information isn't quite so easy. The process typically goes like this: Load data for the date and time of interest, collected from feeder or substation metering points and/or SCADA, is entered by engineers, often manually, into the EA software application. Engineers next use a routine within the EA software to allocate this load to feeders, and to individual line sections that make up each feeder. The load allocation is essential to produce a practical result, and its accuracy is crucial in determining the accuracy of all subsequent voltage, current, thermal loading, and loss calculations.

This load allocation usually depends, to some extent, on the available data and utility engineers' judgment and preferences. Load allocations along a feeder can be made proportional to the installed distribution transformer capacity, or based on customers' energy consumption and spot loads in individual line sections. If customers' monthly energy consumption and spot load information is used, this introduces another step in the process since all this information has to be imported from billing system databases. All in all, this process to import and allocate new load data within a new EA distribution model can be tedious. And its accuracy is generally limited by the fact that most of the customer load data are monthly.

Utility engineers have traditionally mitigated this tedious process by developing and saving a variety of winter and summer models of their distribution systems. When doing a new study, the utility engineer can choose a saved model for the analysis that is most appropriate for the planning horizon and load level.

AMI Improves Agility of EA

Traditional utility planning is becoming more volatile because of changing priorities and needs. Examples typically include changing financing priorities, interest rates, reliability needs, new technology, customer preferences, load changes, and political considerations, among others. The advantage that EA applications provide utility engineers -- to create different models such as winter and summer capital budgeting models previously discussed -- is also a disadvantage in a changing planning environment. None of the saved planning models may adequately represent the distribution system and loads today. But with AMI data, the planning engineer can model the actual system, as it is operating right now.

The effectiveness of EA applications is constrained by the timeliness and accuracy of the load data. The value and functionality of EA is dramatically improved by importing meter loads -- actual measured loads, not allocated loads -- recorded by AMI. Demand data for each active meter for a specific date and time can be exported by the AMI system directly into a detailed EA distribution model with little or no load allocation process required. AMI demand data, depending on the frequency of reads and billing constraints, can conceivably be imported on the same day it is collected, along with current GIS data, into a new EA distribution model.

An EA distribution model frequently updated with circuit and load data from the GIS and AMI systems allows utility engineers to use EA as a planning and operational tool. This allows the utility engineer to perform sophisticated, near real-time distribution simulations and analyses. Three examples of how utility engineers can use these EA capabilities include the following:

   1. Investigate proposed short-term solutions to immediate distribution problems and refine those solutions as necessary to make sure they're consistent with long-term capital budgeting plans. Alternate short-term solutions are sometimes required if the availability of approved budget funds is postponed.

   2. Identify and schedule upgrades/replacements of overloaded distribution line equipment such as transformers, regulators, reclosers, fuses, and line switches before they fail in service.

   3. Prepare contingency switching analyses to assist outage restoration, planned maintenance, and/or switching of loads to alleviate thermal loading and improve voltage levels.

Agile Grid Today -- Smart Grid Tomorrow

Widespread automation throughout a typical distribution system may someday be available and affordable. One of the many deliverables envisioned to be provided by Smart Grid applications is information about critical distribution functions. AMI can provide near real-time demand data on all active meters, which can be exported to detailed EA distribution models that enable utility engineers to perform near real-time distribution simulations and analyses. This may not be considered Smart Grid by some, but it is part of an Agile Grid that's readily available to utilities today, and is a capability that didn't exist just a few years ago.

In the next article in this series, we'll address how AMI can help improve work order management and operations activities.

http://www.energypulse.net/centers/article/article_display.cfm?a_id=1913

This is the third in a series of articles on practical approaches to the smart grid that utilities can initiate now.

When Will Smart Grid Be Available?

The concept of an intelligent electric utility infrastructure or "Smart Grid" is attracting wide interest among utilities, consultants, regulators, and other utility stakeholders. This interest, however, is accompanied by widely differing expectations about when Smart Grid will emerge. Some confidently proclaim that the Smart Grid is here or "just around the corner." But utility management and staff responsible for operating real electric systems are understandably cautious. They realize that Smart Grid will not suddenly become available in a suite of closely bundled technologies and applications. And they are pragmatic about the technology needed today to improve distribution operations for the next few years.

We Can Make the Grid Smarter Right Now

The concept of intelligent infrastructure will continue to evolve, but utilities have tangible choices now, and they do not have to wait passively to provide practical solutions as Smart Grid develops. Utilities can begin using existing and emerging technologies and applications to create something we call an "Agile Grid", on the way to creating a Smart Grid. Many utilities already have deployed, or are planning, key elements or components of an Agile Grid.

While there are numerous examples of these technologies and applications, in this article we discuss just one: integration of advanced metering infrastructure (AMI) with work order management and operations tools. A work order management system (WMS) application may be operated as a stand-alone tool, with no consideration of a Smart Grid, and it will produce ample value. But some utilities are using available data interfaces and protocols to link WMS to other applications to create even greater value, and this increases the utilities' agility in allocating limited field resources to operate and maintain the grid: Applying new tools to prioritize and allocate available operations and maintenance resources takes their systems a step closer to the performance of a Smart Grid.

One view of this Agile Grid concept is illustrated in the diagram below. Many of the technologies and applications shown support interfaces to exchange data and report actionable information that utilities can use now to improve reliability and plant utilization, and to better leverage their capital and operating expenditures. The exchange between WMS and AMI is shown by the dark arrow.

WMS Boosts Grid Performance

WMS applications vary by vendor, but they all permit utility staff to open and close work orders and service orders from a variety of utility operating points. For example, service order requests can be created by customer service reps to capture requests or complaints by customers. Some WMS applications can provide detailed field prints created by engineering staff and bill of material information needed by construction crews. This information, including as-built revisions from crews, can be used to update utility plant accounts and GIS data. Features and capabilities vary, but the value of a WMS is the ability it gives utility staff to effectively organize and manage operations and maintenance work performed by field crews.

Utility management is often confronted with the challenge of prioritizing operations and maintenance activities to safely and reliably keep the lights on despite constrained budgets and resources. While a future Smart Grid may be "self-healing", the Agile Grid of today can effectively leverage limited field resources by using available data to group and prioritize work order and service requests. The result can be a striking increase in field crew productivity.

AMI Improves Agility of WMS

Traditional operations and maintenance (O&M) programs are challenged to keep up with the volatility of changing priorities and reduced budgets. Cyclical or calendar-based programs such as vegetation management are still important activities, but utility staff increasingly relies on "hot spot" tree trimming requests to prioritize this work according to what is necessary today for safety or keeping the lights on. Utility staff is also confronted with prioritizing service requests from customers. Most, if not all, "blinking light" and "low voltage" requests are traditionally investigated by service crews. Many (not all) of these field checks do not find any problems for the utility, but the investigation diverts scarce field resources from other tasks. Utility staff has to exercise caution and investigate most service order requests because they have no way to know if a customer complaint is valid without corroborating data.

A WMS can quickly be populated with current "hot spot" vegetation management, "blinking light", and "low voltage" requests, along with many others. But even with the best WMS, the utility has very limited information with which to prioritize problems and guide where to dispatch their limited resources. AMI information can supplement WMS service requests and help utility staff make data-driven decisions prioritizing allocation of scarce O&M resources. Two examples illustrate how utility staff can use AMI systems as an operational tool to make data-driven dispatch decisions.

   1. AMI can provide momentary interruption or "blink" data to help identify and isolate line reclosers that are operating to clear temporary faults on shorted circuits. Utility staff can use this information to help prioritize when and where to allocate scarce vegetation management resources between cyclical long-term maintenance and short-term "hot spot" needs. Vegetation management records will show how recently the troubled area was trimmed, indicating the likelihood that right-of-way is the cause of the "blinking light" complaint. Other causes may be periodic overloads, phase imbalance, cracked insulators, arcing connectors, or other damaged equipment. Some AMI systems can give additional indications of these problems, too.

   2. AMI can provide meter level voltage measurements including data on voltage sags and swells. Aside from outages and "blinking light" complaints, voltage complaints from customers (or their electrical contractors and appliance vendors) and reports of "low voltage damage" to appliances are relatively common. Today, many utilities rely on on-site voltage measurements or even temporary leave-behind voltage recorders to verify to customers' satisfaction that there is (or is not) a voltage problem. The remotely gathered AMI data show the presence/absence of a voltage problem with certainty, avoiding field investigations that consume valuable staff time.

Agile Grid Today -- Smart Grid Tomorrow

Widespread automation throughout a typical distribution system may someday be available and affordable. One of the many deliverables envisioned to be provided by Smart Grid applications is information about critical distribution functions. Currently available AMI can provide near real-time data from all active meters, which can be assessed by WMS to help utility staff prioritize and allocate their O&M resources and budget. This may not be considered Smart Grid by some, but it is part of an Agile Grid that's readily available to utilities today, and is a capability that didn't exist just a few years ago.
Logged
Anti_Illuminati
Guest
« Reply #10 on: April 21, 2009, 02:27:18 PM »

This article is so incredibly revealing and damning that I could highlight probably 30%+ of it in red.  I'm not going to bother doing that now, save for the last paragraph.  Welcome to the new permanent Al-Qaeda, living and feeding off of the permanent 9/11 lie.  Now you see why they have gone to any lengths shutting down the facts about 9/11?  Because if the real facts of it get out into the public, then it shuts down their subsequent plans for enslavement, it destroys the legitimacy of the "Smart Grid", the GIG, Internet2, IPV6, everything.  THAT IS WHY THIS MUST BE EXPOSED, IMMEDIATELY.

http://www.energypulse.net/centers/article/article_display.cfm?a_id=31

ThreatSim:  Securing Wattage When It’s Needed
10.14.02 Roger Anderson, Director, Energy Research, Columbia University Albert Boulanger, Senior Staff Associate, LDEO, Columbia Univ.

The terrorist events of 9/11, when combined with the power shortages we are all experiencing across the country this summer, suggest that we as a country are not well prepared to meet what is sure to be a growing threat to our ability to deliver electricity where its needed, when it is needed, in the future. Our Power Infrastructure, in particular, delivers the electricity that our entire economy depends upon.

Take out the grid for more than about 12 hours (the operational maximum of most back-up power generation systems) and you shut down the internet, stop all bank transfers, credit card and cash machine transactions, pumps and compressors needed to transport drinking water, fill your car or truck up with gasoline and diesel, deliver natural gas through pipelines and storage facilities no longer work, and stop lights and other key components of the transportation system like railroad and subway power and signaling fail. Most manufacturing comes to a standstill (c.f. NY Times, July 21, 2002 and Figure 1). About the only thing that will continue to work is the landline phone system: the microwave network supporting cell phones will also be shut down.



Figure 1. Thermal image of power consumption in New York City, which this summer is actually increasing, in spite of 9/11. New York City saw an immediate 140 megawatt (MW) drop in electricity demand and a total net reduction of 90 MW with the destruction of the World Trade Center, but that was only about 20 percent of what was predicted in some early reports (Power Alert II: New York's Persisting Energy Crisis, New York Independent System Operator, March, 2002). Is it realistic to think that a coordinated attack on the national power grid could succeed in shutting down electricity across the country for a substantial time?

We believe the threat is real, and that training in response and prevention should be a highest priority of the new Homeland Defense Department. What does it take to build an accurate Electric Grid Threat Simulator? First and foremost, the topologies of the regional high voltage grids managed by Regional Transmission Operators (RTO’s) and Independent System Operators (ISO’s) must be combined on the computer with local power grids, and more generally, distribution networks managed by utilities such as ConEd in New York City, Keyspan on Long Island, PSE&G in New Jersey, and hundreds of other public and private generation and distribution companies across the country (Figure 2).



Northeastern high voltage electric grid on left is connected to local low voltage grids through vulnerable switching and transformer sub-stations (triangles at right). An Electricity Threat Simulator

The burden of developing efficient electric grid threat simulators for war gaming must be shared by city, state and federal governments, the national labs, academia and electrical research institutions, but also by the power distribution, generation, and service companies themselves. It is they who will use the simulators to train their operators. Below we review the current state of affairs in Power Control Systems(PCS’s) in this country and discuss the need for anti-terrorist training and simulation software that will allow us to determine the true threats and appropriate responses to sustained, coordinated attacks on the electric grid.

Of particular concern are the PCS’s that control the production and distribution of electricity throughout the country. Below, we show that they will have to be very much more sophisticated and integrated than at present. It will take a whole new generation of technologies to unite the topologies of the electricity grid on its many scales. Luckily, much of this systems integration technology has been developed recently by the aerospace, automotive and manufacturing industries. The task at hand is its adoption by an electricity industry that is historically late adaptor of new technologies.

That, in turn, will require experts and expertise imported into a corporate and governmental regulatory culture bred out of the electrical utilities of our grandparents: one that is notorious for being insular and slow to respond to technological change (not late, but the very last technological adapters). 9/11 has emphasized the need to fix the Electric Grid Threat Simulation and modeling system before the next attack. With this need in mind, let’s review the present state-of-preparedness of Power Control Systems, and compare them to more modern, integrated command-and-control systems in the military and from other industries. We argue that there is little doubt that fixes must come quickly or our very economic stability may be at risk.



Figure 3. Seamless communications among Power Control Systems of the RTO, ISO and local utilities will be required to redistribute electricity in case of future terrorist attacks against the grid. Pictured here is the Connecticut Valley Electric Exchange. It’s computers do not communicate easily with those from the regional network managers.
 
Today’s Power Control System

Developing an adequate Electric Grid Threat Simulator to train operators of the multiple organizations required to respond to coordinated attacks is not a matter of simply joining the various computer systems that currently run the grids (c.f. Figure 3). As the Pentagon found in trying to integrate computer systems from the different armed forces, predictability declines as the integration tasks become more and more complex. Breakdowns occur that have not been foreseen from historical experiences with the smaller, more linear systems that in the past acted independently.

We participated in a detailed analyses of current and planned technical improvements in the transmission and generation Power Control System of a major regional electricity supplier considered to be a technological leader in the electricity industry. The grid under its management supplies a major urban area of the United States (not New York City) that includes more than 5000 square miles and several million people. This PCS is operated and supported 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, by approximately 100 conscientious and well trained people.

Its mission is to balance power loads among private consumers, businesses, and industrial users against the various generation resources available to it, both from internally owned generators and from external purchases available through company’s trading floor. The PCS in basic concept is really very simplistic. Since consumption is not known second-to-second (meters are not analyzed for consumption patterns, but are instead used only by the billing department), the computer merely balances the spin of power generator turbines under its control to keep the AC of the grid at as close to 60 Hz as possible.

Any less and the computer revs up the RPM’s of turbine generators; any more and the computer sells the excess power to the regional grid through itsbrokerage. Problems appear if the frequency of the AC in the transmission grid begins to drop below 59.99997 Hz (five nines) for computers, and below 59.997 (three nines) for electric motors, and then “all hell breaks lose” to quote an operator from the PCS. The inflow and outflow of electricity is monitored in real-time at all Interconnect sites and at critical junctions of the company’s own transmission lines.

The data are transmitted to the PCS every 2 seconds. Simultaneously, real-time costs are computed for all generators used to produce power for the company. A diverse mix of natural gas, coal, oil, steam and nuclear energy fuels these generators. Costs to produce power for all generators and fuel combinations are constantly compared with prices available from suppliers. The PCS automatically selects the cheapest alternative at any time for adding power to the grid.

In addition, the PCS manages a one-way, real-time Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) network that sends an additional 230,000 measurement inputs to the PCS every 30 seconds. For emergencies such as hurricanes and tornadoes, the PCS has computerized controls that extend directly into circuit breakers for computer banks and expensive electrical equipment of major business customers. The problem is that both the software and hardware of the PCS were designed (and often built) decades ago under the assumption that excess power would always be readily available from other utilities on the regional grids.

If the computer didn’t have enough generators to meet demand, it would purchase electricity from the regional grid at a fixed price. With de-regulation of the electricity industry, thousands of independent electricity producers are popping up all over the country to sell expensive power at times of high demand. In addition, choke points are popping up at critical and varying junctions of the electricity grid all over the nation.

Human-in-the-Loop

Most operator tasks are not automated within the PCS, but depend upon the experience and awareness of the people themselves. The operational processes of the staff are procedure-based and well-documented, but are available only in paper manuals. The company does not use new software capabilities available for automating alarms, work-tag tracking, and the opening and closing of circuit breakers remotely. No trend analyses or problem resolution is done computationally, nor is a data historian used (common practices in other industries).

The “technology cycle” for new computer software and hardware (still paired) has historically been 14-16 years, with the latest upgrade the most rapid in company’s history (1988 to 2000). We found the PCS operators “bracing for a long next few years” and the software vendor lamenting the “incredibly long sales cycle in the power industry.” Perhaps more critical in today’s world, while there is an excellent and well practiced plan for restoration of services from natural disaster outages (common), there is still nothing about terrorism (not yet anticipated when the procedures were last updated in 2000).

Training has become a special issue: the operational staff is “too busy”, and has erratically attended organization, and training sessions. The SCADA data that is used for training must be real-time, and cannot be replayed for instructional purposes. No case histories are used. There was no training simulator in this software update cycle, a casualty of budget cuts.

It is ironic that the cost to maintain an up-to-date simulator became too high because of the rapidly changing configuration and complexity of the national power grid, and particularly of the rapidly expanding power input into the company’s grid from independent power producers and customer co-generation facilities as the result of de-regulation. The major drivers to operational costs of the company are Operations and Maintenance (O&M) of its facilities. Overhauls of generators and reconfigurations and modernizations of its power grid must be scheduled well in advance and coordinated with other regional suppliers in order to be transparent to customers.

Software updates must be handled with particular care. The company upgraded the PCS computer systems in 2001 to a client-server, UNIX architecture, supported by an Oracle database, and modern graphical User Interfaces (GUI). However, the networkability of the system still leaves something to be desired. Its Ethernet is just now being upgraded to 100Mbps, and top management for security reasons forbids use of the Internet for communications with the field and its own SCADA systems.

The company Intranet is primitive at best, and no Microsoft products are found in the PCS at all (perhaps the last remaining industry for Bill Gates to conquer). Operators are NOT utilizing many of the new features of the PCS software system. For example, the 2001 software design supports interoperability between the two types of UNIX workstations: one to control interaction between the company and outside power suppliers, and one for control of internal company power distribution. In spite of this feature, operators of one system cannot call up or interact with the other.

Operators are trained to operate both systems, and they do rotate from one to the other on a regular schedule, but they are not allowed to let the computers communicate. Work orders to substations and power linesmen are created on a computer, printed out, and then FAXED to the field offices by the PCS operators. These work orders are not tracked further by the PCS, although it has the capability to manage electronic work orders and automatically send e-mails.

Use of a Threat Simulator in the PCS?

Optimization within the PCS is a manual process executed by experienced personnel without much computer help. In our Case Study, expert systems and Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies for the complex scheduling required for power management “were looked at years ago by IBM. They tried to develop a prototype system. However, IBM declared their process to be too complex, and moved on to easier markets.” This analysis was done in 1985, and the power company still considers it valid. IBM’s opinion is that they tried to develop a prototype of too much of the operations at once, back then.

New neural network and data mining technologies should make this a “very doable task in today’s computational world” according to IBM. It is ironic that the added complexity of the system made the keeping of an accurate computer simulator expendable. That would be like an aerospace company saying that its new planes are too complex to create a training environment for pilots -- other than flying the machine itself.

A Coordinated Terrorist Attack on the Power Grid

A new generation of American engineers and managers must be trained in electricity production and distribution under threat from terrorism. An Electric Grid Threat Simulator for the PCS is required that will train in the complexities introduced by terrorism, combined with the coincident convergence of supply and demand across the electricity grid of North America. Such threats, if geographically distributed, coordinated, and sustained over a period of time, will drive the electricity grid to more and more non-linearity, causing breakdowns that have not been foreseen from previous experiences with the more linear systems of today.

A future workforce must be trained to cope with this uncertain future. Automated variance detection, combined with “make-it-so” problems-to-solutions mappings, is a non-linear inverse problem that requires a simulator to teach operators how to solve. The integration of technologies required for this cross-system optimization problem will require an unprecedented degree of interdisciplinary collaboration among the various operators of the topology of the grid, from local to regional and national and international, in and of itself.

In a grid model with hundreds of thousands of failure points, training becomes problematic without proper computer simulators. The Electric Grid Threat Simulator must not be too general. It must focus on critical failures that have specific remedies. The chaining of these events is where the simulator becomes powerful. Each element of a transfer function that covers both the regional, national, and local grid topologies can then be transformed into responses. Closure can then be computed. Global behavior is then determined from the synthesis of the component models.

Put directly, what are the threats, and what are the failure points. These must be determined through what we call a “Learning Harness” wrapped over the topological models of the various scales of the grid. Consider a coordinated attack on the local components of the power grid. In order, they attack the microwave communications of SCADA data, then a power generator and a transformer substation, all within several minutes of each other. The cascading failures result in escalating problems throughout the local grid that don’t at first affect the national high voltage grid (c.f., Peerenboom, 2001).

Suppose now, however, that this attack is followed a few minutes later by a coordinated attack on the high voltage regional transmission grid. The first hit causes problems in Maine (Figure 4). Then a minute later, Buffalo is hit, where most spare generators are. Within 3 minutes, problems have spread throughout the northeastern United States if remedial action to deliver missing power and reroute electricity is not activated on a massive scale – and within about 5 minutes. The question is: what system do we use to train for such scenarios?



Figure 4. Simulated terrorist attack on the Northeastern Power Grid. Note how quickly the problem spreads from Maine to Buffalo, then to the entire Northeast. (Yellow and Red are areas with inadequate power to keep the lights on, obviously bad for all electrical machinery and computers. Simulations from PowerWorld.com).

Design of a Electric Grid Threat Simulator

In general, few PCS simulation environments exist to train new engineers and managers about how to respond to crisis scenarios of any kind. The case study revealed that fault detection and tracking of what has failed, where, and when, remains dependent upon operator experience and “instinct”. We hope that the incentive for change got a significant boost on 9/11. No question the PCS can be better supported by computer intelligence in the form of a Electric Grid Threat Simulator for War Gaming.

As we said, we believe a Learning Harness is required in order to build such an Electric Grid Threat Simulation environment. The Learning Harness represents first a fundamental mapping of the business, security, environmental, and engineering processes and activities required to maintain and operate the grid under attack, and then a reinforcement learning feedback loop to optimize decisions across systems (Figure 5). This explicitly requires a concerted, confidential, unprecedented collaboration of all involved parties.

These processes must be known in enough detail to develop computerized variance detection and contribute weights to the “credit assignment” problem of what to do to anticipate and fix the problems caused by terrorists. Known solutions to problems are kept in a best practices data historian. The system must learn from mistakes by tracking performance metrics of previous actions in much the manner of a chess, backgammon or checkers program. A key technology we use is the Suitability Matrix(sm).

This is a linked set of matrix representations (a set of spread sheets) that use generalized weights as the values of the cells. It maps import of an attribute (a problem) to possible decisions (a solution). These matrices are "populated" using reinforcement learning, a type of dynamic programming, which optimizes decision-making under uncertainty and time (4D learning). Data gathering for such a system will provide the following:

    * Eliminate the "wish I could have seen it coming" through multiple scenario planning
    * Estimate risk on all decisions
    * Identify solutions quickly
    * Eliminate latency in getting the right actions to the right people
    * Verify that actions are being executed properly in the field



Figure 5. The Electric Grid Threat Simulator must connect software applications that constantly re-compute each bullet indicated above – this framework has already been enacted for the Oil, Internet, and Aerospace industries (Bertsekas and Tsitsiklis, 1995). The key foundation to our Threat Simulator is an adaptive feedback control system, which involves the solving of implicit and explicit inverse algorithms in a controller to minimize error and arrive at an optimal solution (Bertsekas and Tsitsiklis, 1996.).

We adopt a mixture of AI, operations research, and systems engineering to build our controller. AI works well with discrete, richly structured, and nonlinear problems and control theory offers an overall framework for solving the linear and nonlinear components of the system-wide problem (Werbos, 1999, 2001). Certainty factors or probabilities to represent ranking of alternatives can be adapted by the Electric Grid Threat Simulator learning system over time (e.g. Neuneier, 1995, Werbos, 1998, 1999).

This online learning is key to a successful Electric Grid Threat Simulator. In sum, our Threat Simulator implements a unified framework for generating corrective actions that individuals and automated systems in the organization must take to align the business to reality in the face of multiple threats. The Learning harness uses metrics to gauge feedback and train for best responses. It uses a discrete forward model to compute event propagation. This is the same problem encountered by the Internet, and there are management programs that do just that to reroute message traffic in case of a failure in a router or a series of routers, automatically.

The use of Codebooks within Internet fault detection software (Yemini et al, 1996, 1997, 2001) is a good example (see www.smarts.com). Causal analysis determines how each problem propagates through the topology, then “cost-to-go” simulation within a reinforcement-learning framework is used to determine automatic corrective actions Update the learning harness several times with varying simulated disasters, and it learns the correct responses. Priorities in response are then developed by the system depending upon a damage metric (Anderson et al, 1996, 1998a,b,c, 1999, 2000, 2001a,b, 2002).

Summary

The electrical grid of North America is under significant threat, and as a fundamental underpinning of the global sustainability of our economic system, we must take remedial action to save it. Grand Challenge change is required, not incremental tuning. As a first step, a Electric Grid Threat Simulator is needed immediately to train a new generation of energy professional in ways to cope with the radical new world they face in the electricity workplace under threat.

Gone are the days when Americans took vital services like electricity, computer networks, and safe drinking water for granted. We must be diligent against this new terrorist threat or our infrastructure will come tumbling down, and along with it, our American way of life.

Bibliography:

Anderson, R.N., Boulanger, A., Bagdonas, E., He, W., and Xu, L., Method for Identifying Subsurface Fluid Migration and Drainage Pathways in and Among Oil and Gas Reservoirs Using 3-D and 4-D Seismic Imaging, U.S. Patent 5,586,082, 1996.
Anderson, R.N., et al, Quantitative Tools link Portfolio Management with use of Technology, Oil Gas Journal, Nov. 30, p. 48, 1998a.
Anderson, R.N., A. Boulanger, 4-D Command-and-Control, Am. Oil Gas Rep., 1998b.
Anderson, R.N., Oil Production in the 21st Century, Sci. Am., 278, p. 86-91, 1998c.
Anderson, R.N., Esser, W., How to Operate an Advanced Digital Enterprise, Offshore Technology, Oct., 2000
Anderson, R.N., Esser, W., Energy Company as Advanced Digital Enterprise, American Oil & Gas Reporter, Jan. 2001a.
Anderson, R.N., Boulanger, A., He, W., Xu, L., Method and System for Automated Support of Real-Time 4D Business Decisions for the Upstream Petroleum Industry, U.S. Patent, applied for, 2001b.
Anderson, R.N., Boulanger, A., Mello, U., He, W., Wiggins, W., and Xu, L., 4-D Seismic Reservoir Simulation and Characterization Method and System, U.S. Patent, applied for, 2002.
Bertsekas, D.P., Tsitsiklis, J. N., Neuro-Dynamic Programming, Athena Scientific, 1996.
Neuneier, R., Optimal Strategies with density-Estimating Neural Networks, ICANN 95, Paris, 1995.
Peerenboom, J., Infrastructure interdependencies: Overview of concepts and terminology, Argonne National Laboratory, 2001.
Werbos, P.J., Elastic Fuzzy Logic System, U.S. Patent 5,751,915, 1998. Werbos, P.J., Maximizing Long-Term Gas Industry Profits in two Minutes using Neural Network Methods, IEEE trans. On Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, Vol. 19, No. 2, 315-333, 1989. , U.S. Patent 5,924,085, 1999.
Werbos, P.J., 3-Brain Architecture for an Intelligent decision and Control System, U.S. Patent 6,169,981, 2001.
Yemini, S., Kliger, S., Mozes, E., Yemini, Y., and Ohsie, D., High Speed and Robust Event Correlation. IEEE Communications, May, 1996.
Yemini, Y., Yemini, S., Kliger, S., Apparatus and Method for Anaylzing and Correlating Events in a System using a Casualty Matrix, U. S. Patent 5,661,668, 1997.
Yemini, Y., Yemini, S., Kliger, S., Apparatus and Method for Event Correlation and Problem Reporting, U. S. Patent 6,249,755, 2001.
Logged
Anti_Illuminati
Guest
« Reply #11 on: April 25, 2009, 10:09:45 PM »

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123914805204099085.html

APRIL 8, 2009

Electricity Grid in U.S. Penetrated By Spies



Robert Moran monitors an electric grid in Dallas. Such infrastructure grids across the country are vulnerable to cyberattacks.

WASHINGTON -- Cyberspies have penetrated the U.S. electrical grid and left behind software programs that could be used to disrupt the system, according to current and former national-security officials.

The spies came from China, Russia and other countries, these officials said, and were believed to be on a mission to navigate the U.S. electrical system and its controls. The intruders haven't sought to damage the power grid or other key infrastructure, but officials warned they could try during a crisis or war.

"The Chinese have attempted to map our infrastructure, such as the electrical grid," said a senior intelligence official. "So have the Russians."

The espionage appeared pervasive across the U.S. and doesn't target a particular company or region, said a former Department of Homeland Security official. "There are intrusions, and they are growing," the former official said, referring to electrical systems. "There were a lot last year."

Many of the intrusions were detected not by the companies in charge of the infrastructure but by U.S. intelligence agencies, officials said. Intelligence officials worry about cyber attackers taking control of electrical facilities, a nuclear power plant or financial networks via the Internet.

Authorities investigating the intrusions have found software tools left behind that could be used to destroy infrastructure components, the senior intelligence official said. He added, "If we go to war with them, they will try to turn them on."

Officials said water, sewage and other infrastructure systems also were at risk.

"Over the past several years, we have seen cyberattacks against critical infrastructures abroad, and many of our own infrastructures are as vulnerable as their foreign counterparts," Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair recently told lawmakers. "A number of nations, including Russia and China, can disrupt elements of the U.S. information infrastructure."

Officials cautioned that the motivation of the cyberspies wasn't well understood, and they don't see an immediate danger. China, for example, has little incentive to disrupt the U.S. economy because it relies on American consumers and holds U.S. government debt.

But protecting the electrical grid and other infrastructure is a key part of the Obama administration's cybersecurity review, which is to be completed next week. Under the Bush administration, Congress approved $17 billion in secret funds to protect government networks, according to people familiar with the budget. The Obama administration is weighing whether to expand the program to address vulnerabilities in private computer networks, which would cost billions of dollars more. A senior Pentagon official said Tuesday the Pentagon has spent $100 million in the past six months repairing cyber damage.

Overseas examples show the potential havoc. In 2000, a disgruntled employee rigged a computerized control system at a water-treatment plant in Australia, releasing more than 200,000 gallons of sewage into parks, rivers and the grounds of a Hyatt hotel.

Last year, a senior Central Intelligence Agency official, Tom Donahue, told a meeting of utility company representatives in New Orleans that a cyberattack had taken out power equipment in multiple regions outside the U.S. The outage was followed with extortion demands, he said.

The U.S. electrical grid comprises three separate electric networks, covering the East, the West and Texas. Each includes many thousands of miles of transmission lines, power plants and substations. The flow of power is controlled by local utilities or regional transmission organizations. The growing reliance of utilities on Internet-based communication has increased the vulnerability of control systems to spies and hackers, according to government reports.



The sophistication of the U.S. intrusions -- which extend beyond electric to other key infrastructure systems -- suggests that China and Russia are mainly responsible, according to intelligence officials and cybersecurity specialists. While terrorist groups could develop the ability to penetrate U.S. infrastructure, they don't appear to have yet mounted attacks, these officials say.

It is nearly impossible to know whether or not an attack is government-sponsored because of the difficulty in tracking true identities in cyberspace. U.S. officials said investigators have followed electronic trails of stolen data to China and Russia.

Russian and Chinese officials have denied any wrongdoing. "These are pure speculations," said Yevgeniy Khorishko, a spokesman at the Russian Embassy. "Russia has nothing to do with the cyberattacks on the U.S. infrastructure, or on any infrastructure in any other country in the world."

A spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, Wang Baodong, said the Chinese government "resolutely opposes any crime, including hacking, that destroys the Internet or computer network" and has laws barring the practice. China was ready to cooperate with other countries to counter such attacks, he said, and added that "some people overseas with Cold War mentality are indulged in fabricating the sheer lies of the so-called cyberspies in China."

Utilities are reluctant to speak about the dangers. "Much of what we've done, we can't talk about," said Ray Dotter, a spokesman at PJM Interconnection LLC, which coordinates the movement of wholesale electricity in 13 states and the District of Columbia. He said the organization has beefed up its security, in conformance with federal standards.

In January 2008, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved new protection measures that required improvements in the security of computer servers and better plans for handling attacks.

Last week, Senate Democrats introduced a proposal that would require all critical infrastructure companies to meet new cybersecurity standards and grant the president emergency powers over control of the grid systems and other infrastructure.

Specialists at the U.S. Cyber Consequences Unit, a nonprofit research institute, said attack programs search for openings in a network, much as a thief tests locks on doors. Once inside, these programs and their human controllers can acquire the same access and powers as a systems administrator.

The White House review of cybersecurity programs is studying ways to shield the electrical grid from such attacks, said James Lewis, who directed a study for the Center for Strategic and International Studies and has met with White House reviewers.

The reliability of the grid is ultimately the responsibility of the North American Electric Reliability Corp., an independent standards-setting organization overseen by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.

The NERC set standards last year requiring companies to designate "critical cyber assets." Companies, for example, must check the backgrounds of employees and install firewalls to separate administrative networks from those that control electricity flow. The group will begin auditing compliance in July.

—Rebecca Smith contributed to this article.
_____________________________________________________________
http://blogs.wsj.com/chinajournal/2009/04/09/china-denies-hacking-us-electricity-grid/

April 9, 2009, 8:22 AM ET

China Denies Hacking U.S. Electricity Grid


China officially responded to claims by U.S. national security officials that spies from China have been in involved in a mission to the American electrical system, as reported by the WSJ, categorically, if predictably, denying the allegations.

“The intrusion doesn’t exist at all,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said at a regular press conference. “We hope that the concerned media will prudently deal with some groundless remarks, especially those concerning accusations against China.”

“I have also noticed that the U.S. White House had denied the media reports,” she said.

A report in the state-run China Daily cited Chinese experts who rejected the so-called “China threat” theory and tied it to the financial crisis.

“Chinese scholars Wednesday rebutted US’s allegations that China was engaged in spying and forging secret nuclear deals with foreign countries, saying these were induced by the perceived ‘China threat’ worrying Washington,” the report said. “U.S. politicians have been debating the country’s foreign and military strategy shifts in the wake of the financial crisis, and some took the opportunity to play up the ‘threat’ posed by China for their own gains, experts in Beijing said.”

–Sky Canaves

"Elouwen wrote:

Just more of the same old military industrial congressional complex fanning the flames of warfare nation profits. They never give up."
Logged
Anti_Illuminati
Guest
« Reply #12 on: April 25, 2009, 10:16:06 PM »

http://blogs.wsj.com/environmentalcapital/2009/04/08/grid-lock-will-a-smart-grid-repel-or-open-doors-to-a-cyber-attack/

April 8, 2009, 10:06 AM ET

Grid Lock: Will a Smart Grid Repel or Open Doors to a Cyber Attack?

By Keith Johnson


Is it a good idea to put the U.S. electricity system on the same footing as your spyware-addled computer?

As momentum gathers for the creation of an Internet-like “smart grid” that will do for the electricity grid what the Internet did for home shopping, the WSJ reports the cyberspace wars have begun:

    Cyberspies have penetrated the U.S. electrical grid and left behind software programs that could be used to disrupt the system, according to current and former national-security officials.
    The spies came from China, Russia and other countries, these officials said, and were believed to be on a mission to navigate the U.S. electrical system and its controls. The intruders haven’t sought to damage the power grid or other key infrastructure, but officials warned they could try during a crisis or war.
    “The Chinese have attempted to map our infrastructure, such as the electrical grid,” said a senior intelligence official. “So have the Russians.”

So far the damage is more theoretical than real, the paper notes. But the intrusions underscore the vulnerability of a key component of the nation’s infrastructure.

Cybersecurity has been in the spotlight since last year, when the Center for Strategic and International Studies prepared a big report on how the new administration should deal with the threat of cyber attacks, which do “more real damage every day to the economic health and national security of the United States than any other threat.” The Senate just introduced a bill largely based on the recommendations in that report that would put responsibility for U.S. cybersecurity increasingly in the hands of the federal government, rather than in the hands of private-sector companies.

The big question is whether the move to a smart grid would increase the country’s vulnerability to such attacks, or serve as the best form of defense.

The Center for American Progress, in its latest study on the electricity transmission system, said the smart grid was the solution—not the problem—because it would represent the chance to finally upgrade vulnerable old, jury-rigged technology currently cobbled together in the electric grid. Greater regulation and government oversight could also push through costlier but more effective security technologies that might otherwise not pass muster with the market, the report said.

Maybe so—but that still leaves open the question of how the new smart grid should be designed. Should it have open standards, like the Internet Protocol, understood by everyone from hackers to software developers? Or should the smart grid rely on a closed, closely-held, standard specially-created by companies building smart grid gear?

The CSIC report found that old Internet protocols are responsible for much of the U.S. weakness in cyberspace—the 1970s really were a more trusting era. But that doesn’t rule out open standards, as Earth2Tech has noted: The more developers there are speaking a given language, as it were, the likelier it is that the private sector will respond with a spate of security improvements.

Either way, much of that task will now fall to the California-based Electric Power Research Institute, which was picked today by the Commerce Department to draw up the “roadmap” of the new smart grid. Its main task will be figuring out just what standards should prevail in that brave new world.
_____________________________________________________________
http://earth2tech.com/2009/03/22/hacking-the-smart-grid/#more-26449

Imagine if the damage caused by Internet viruses and worms — such as downed web sites and snatched credit card info — were unleashed on the critical infrastructure of the power grid. The results could include targeted blackouts, tampering with power generation (nuclear!), or using energy consumption data for malicious intent. While a smart power grid, which leverages information technology to add more intelligence to the electricity network, will give consumers and utilities more control over energy consumption, along with that transformation from analog to digital will come a threat that already plagues the Internet: hacking.

According to a report in The National Journal last year, Chinese hackers may have already used what little infotech intelligence there is on the current power grid to cause two major blackouts. So, with a smart grid moving closer to becoming a reality, utilities and federal regulators alike are trying to ready themselves for the potential dangers that it will bring. As representatives from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission said at a smart grid policy meeting last week, maintaining security is of the highest priority.

Why is a smarter power grid so vulnerable? Joe Fagan, an attorney for Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman who has spent his career representing the energy industry (including working extensively with FERC), explained that transforming a largely one-way distribution network like the power grid into a two-way system delivers that many more points of contact with the network. And if the power grid will be run by networks based on Internet Protocol, well, hackers have already spent years developing the tools needed to take such networks down.

In addition, Ben Schuman, an analyst with Pacific Crest Securities, notes that the smart meters being installed in homes are largely basic, low-cost — around $100 — consumer electronics that a hacker could easily purchase, take apart, and use to learn about the accompanying communication network.

The good news is that there are several steps that can be taken to build security into the smart grid from the ground up, and the stimulus package is allocating some $11 billion for smart grid-related technology. Fagan estimates that utilities would need to spend on the order of millions of dollars each to implement security controls.

Crucial to the maintenance of security will be the establishment of industry standards. At the smart grid policy meeting held last week, FERC Acting Chairman Jon Wellinghoff issued a statement calling for the development of “standards to ensure the reliability and security, both physical and cyber, of the electric system.” While FERC doesn’t itself develop standards, the agency will be asking for input from standards bodies that work on security in the Internet, engineering, and electronics industries. Over the next month and a half, companies and the public can offer their thoughts as to the direction such the standards will take.

The second factor necessary to securing the smart grid will be the use of an open platform. Yeah, we know, that sounds counterintuitive, but as Pacific Crest’s Schuman explains, the most robust security systems out there are largely based on already-established open standards. In order for third-party developers to be able to contribute their best solutions to a smart power grid, it needs to be based on an open platform as well.

Ultimately, the hurdles to securing the smart grid shouldn’t stand in the way of implementing it. The benefits of offering consumers and utilities more control over energy consumption, which can lead to a reduction in energy use and carbon reduction, far outweighs the security concerns.

This article also appeared on BusinessWeek.com.
Logged
Anti_Illuminati
Guest
« Reply #13 on: April 25, 2009, 11:50:05 PM »



http://www.ferc.gov/news/statements-speeches/wellinghoff/2009/03-19-09-wellinghoff.asp

Statement: March 19, 2009     
Docket No: PL09-4-000

Acting Chairman Wellinghoff's statement on Smart Grid development with proposed policy, action plan

"Thank you for this presentation and my thanks to all the staff who contributed to the drafting of this Proposed Policy Statement and Action Plan.

We are experiencing a profound change in the way our nation produces, delivers and consumes electricity.

A "smarter" bulk power system, and the generation and demand resources associated with it, will operate more securely, reliably and efficiently. Improved monitoring of the electric system with real-time information from advanced sensors, and the enhanced ability to process information and coordinate actions of millions of devices and systems in real time, will allow system operators to optimize system reliability and reduce grid costs and congestion.

The Smart Grid will also play a critical role in the integration of new renewable resources and will be vital to enable advanced technologies such as plug-in electric vehicles with 'vehicle to grid' capabilities.

I expect that this increased efficiency, reliability and flexibility of the electric system will offer consumers more choices and the ability to manage their energy costs, resulting in long-term savings for everyone.

The Commission is issuing this Proposed Policy Statement on Smart Grid to prioritize and accelerate development of key interoperability standards that are needed to unlock the potential benefits of the Smart Grid. The National Institute of Standards and Technology, FERC staff, DOE and representatives of industry have been working diligently to develop interoperability standards.

In many cases, broadly accepted standards currently exist to support some portion of the areas that we have identified as high priority for standards development. However, these existing standards need to be extended and broadened and made to work with each other.

The security and reliability of the transmission system is of paramount concern to the Commission. Therefore, it is appropriate that the first priority we articulate in this proposed Policy Statement is for the development of standards to ensure the reliability and security, both physical and cyber, of the electric system.

It is also appropriate that the interim rate policy we announce to encourage smart grid investment requires a demonstration that deployment of the new technologies will ensure system security and be compliant with Commission-approved Reliability Standards.

I also agree that the development of interoperability standards for inter-system communication, wide-area situational awareness, demand response, electric storage, and electric transportation should be prioritized and accelerated. The work done on these key standards will provide a foundation for development of many other standards.

The guidance we provide today is also timely given the expanding development of renewable resources of electricity in the United States. We anticipate significant additions of wind generation, as well as generation from other variable renewable sources. This is driven in part by state Renewable Portfolio Standards and by national tax and energy policies. Renewable energy resources such as wind, solar, and geothermal are often located in economically developable quantities at dispersed sites remote from load centers.

As I stated at our technical conference on March 2, I believe that developing the transmission infrastructure needed to deliver electricity from renewable energy resources is essential to meeting our national energy goals, such as reducing greenhouse gas emissions, strengthening our national security, and revitalizing our economy. The communication and coordination standards and protocols of the Smart Grid will be critical to the efficient and reliable integration of these new renewable resources.

I look forward to the comments that we invite on these matters."
Logged
Anti_Illuminati
Guest
« Reply #14 on: April 26, 2009, 12:40:21 AM »

Folks, THIS IS OFF THE CHARTS INSANE, I MEAN *REALLY INSANE*!!!

It's late right now but I'll try to explain this real quick (this is damned complicated to articulate).

OK 1st without the engineered economic crisis/non-existent energy crisis they could NEVER roll out something like the Smart Grid--it would not be sellable PERIOD.

You have all of the criminalization of even being alive shame on you for hurting the Earth, for breathing, etc.

So the public has been sold on 100% illegitimate need to save energy, when everyone could burn all the energy they want period, forever.

Now here's the thing that clicked in my mind that I never thought of before:

I had always simply thought of false flag cyber attacks, and fake energy crisis IN AND OF THEMSELVES being used to justify the smart grid.

That is not the case here after reading this.

Watch the Smart Grid get rolled out at incredible speed nationwide, even before the bonafide GIG itself, because they don't need the full blown GIG to run the SG.

It may also be the case that they will need somewhat more time to fully implement internet 2 than we think, although probably not much.

Therefore, you roll out the Smart Grid FIRST.  Now keep in mind the Smart Grid at this point was always a problem reaction solution tool for the aforementioned.

Here's where the difference comes into play:

The Smart Grid is even more vulnerable to false flag cyber attacks than the existing power grid, because it is COMPLETELY CENTRALIZED, in the same fashion as how CS will be as well.

So now they can use what was already a problem reaction solution vehicle already, FOR A SUBSEQUENT PROBLEM REACTION SOLUTION SCENARIO--CREATING THE NEED FOR INTERNET 2 TO KEEP THE NEW "SMART" POWER GRID SAFE.  To word this another way--the rollout of the Smart Grid is actually serving THE EXACT SAME PURPOSE AS A FALSE FLAG TERROR ATTACK--one that will be completely oblivious to everyone because no one will get it.  Why be really obvious like Mumbai, 7/7, and 9/11 again, when you can roll out something that isn't even an attack, that gets no one killed, but fully moves toward massively enslaving us all just the same? 

This is highly probable because it allows them a relatively low--key way to finalize the GIG, and when that is done, then they can kill 80+% of the population without anyone along the way having posed any significant resistance to them because they kept everyone discombobulated with thinking that somehow they were participating in a process to help save the Earth, and feel "responsible" suddenly, and not "guilty" from the subconscious demonization of living off of the Earth as God had intended--until the AI machines come to wipe us all out.  Read this article and you will understand how I came to this conclusion about the Smart Grid.


http://www.internetnews.com/security/article.php/3801846/Obama+Calls+for+Cybersecurity+Review.htm

Obama Calls for Cybersecurity Review

After a string of breaches and data leaks, president orders two-month interagency review to shore up computing infrastructure.

February 10, 2009
By Kenneth Corbin:

On the heels of a number of high-profile data leaks, President Obama has ordered an immediate two-month review of the federal government's various cybersecurity programs -- a move that could set the stage for a shakeup of the nation's sprawling network security activities.

Heading the interagency review will be Melissa Hathaway, a former consultant with Booz Allen Hamilton who worked under the director of national intelligence in the Bush administration.

Hathaway will be tasked with coordinating with the relevant agencies, Congress and the private sector to evaluate how the government's cybersecurity initiatives are being managed, and develop a framework to streamline the far-flung operations.

"The national security and economic health of the United States depend on the security, stability, and integrity of our nation's cyberspace, both in the public and private sectors," John Brennan, Obama's assistant for counterterrorism and homeland security, said in a statement. "The president is confident that we can protect our nation's critical cyber infrastructure while at the same time adhering to the rule of law and safeguarding privacy rights and civil liberties."

The review could lay the groundwork for a substantial overhaul of the government's cybersecurity activities, which have been spread across numerous agencies and come under fire for repeated breaches and data leaks in government systems.

As part of his homeland-security agenda, Obama has said he plans to create a position of national cyber adviser, who would report to the president and work with the agencies to develop a coordinated cyber-security policy.

The 60-day interagency review could be Hathaway's job tryout for that position, observers said.

"She's really well-qualified for this," said James Lewis, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic International Studies (CSIS), a Washington think tank. "She was one of the two or three people who pushed cybersecurity in the Bush administration."

Lewis directed a project called the Commission on Cybersecurity for the 44th President, which culminated in a detailed list of policy recommendations released in December and presented to the Obama transition team.

Chief among those recommendations were a consolidation of the agencies dealing with cybersecurity, greater investment in security research, and a concerted effort to shore up the defenses for the nation's infrastructure against cyber threats.

Despite following some of the CSIS recommendations, the jury may still be out on whether the new moves will go far enough. Lewis and CSIS had hoped that an Obama-backed economic stimulus bill would have included provisions about cybersecurity. So far, dedicated cybersecurity spending has yet to materialize.

"It's a little disappointing to see the stimulus package doesn't say anything about making the infrastructure more secure," Lewis told InternetNews.com.  [Insert:  Is this a joke?  someone from CSIS saying that?  Like he gives a damn about real security?  Maybe he's queuing that there will be false flags.]

The economic stimulus bill currently under debate in Congress would allocate billions of dollars to a so-called smart grid, which would introduce Internet-like capabilities to the nation's power system. But without the proper defenses against cyber threats, the nation could pay a big price for the efficiency improvements a smart grid promises.

"If we build an electrical grid and don't pay any attention to cybersecurity, it's going to be a huge error," Lewis said.

[Insert:  Sounds like he's admitting that this is in fact what will occur, and there will be false flags.]

Still, Lewis said that the formation of review committee could be a good down payment on a more thorough revamping of the national cybersecurity regime.

"It says it will do one of the things that we thought was crucial -- which is come up with a strategy," Lewis said. "If they come out with a good strategy that really looks at the whole issue and not a part of it, we'll be better off."

Obama could wait until the review has concluded before he names his national cyber adviser. In addition to Hathaway, he is rumored to be considering candidates from the Department of Defense and the National Security Agency, as well as advisers from his campaign. No one from the private sector or the Homeland Security is believed to be on the short list.




Logged
Mike Philbin
Guest
« Reply #15 on: April 26, 2009, 02:03:44 AM »

Quote from: Anti_Illuminati
So now they can use what was already a problem reaction solution vehicle already, FOR A SUBSEQUENT PROBLEM REACTION SOLUTION SCENARIO--CREATING THE NEED FOR INTERNET 2 TO KEEP THE NEW "SMART" POWER GRID SAFE.  To word this another way--the rollout of the Smart Grid is actually serving THE EXACT SAME PURPOSE AS A FALSE FLAG TERROR ATTACK--one that will be completely oblivious to everyone because no one will get it.  Why be really obvious like Mumbai, 7/7, and 9/11 again, when you can roll out something that isn't even an attack, that gets no one killed, but fully moves toward massively enslaving us all just the same? 

Needs re-iterating as a bump mechanism.

Never even saw it coming (!)

Jee-Zus.
Logged
luckee1
Guest
« Reply #16 on: April 26, 2009, 11:26:03 AM »

A_I until you showed us where these guys ran their mouths, I was totally sold on Smart grid.  The way EPb (Electric Power Board) is selling it here tells us it is to provide internet services at a way cheaper price than Comcast and Bellsouth.

I had no idea the other appoications that come with "Smart Grid"  I didn't know it was a more comprehensive way to pry into our homes and lives,


Thanks for straightening me out.  Please  get some sleep.  Thank you for connecting the dots.
Logged
lordssyndicate
Member
*****
Offline Offline

Posts: 1,141


Stop The New World Order


WWW
« Reply #17 on: April 26, 2009, 03:26:55 PM »

Smart Grid is Evil it is "The Grid Weapon 2.0".

It is designed by EDS as outlines by OMG utilizing COBRA programing language.

http://cobra-language.com/

The "Agile Methodology" as it is essentially now referred too - is the idea that PROMIS has now evolved into a system that infects all it touches. It's applications present users and developers with RBAC policy controlled frameworks designed to limit their ability to "disrupt administrative control." This is a centralized control mechanism that prevent local operation centers from being able to ever possibly compromise administrative control.

Meaning, that the very programing language and core of this system is designed to present only and only those with express administrative control as designated  by DISA DOD policy -- meaning only your average 3 star general with the proper above top secret level clearance for said specific project and his superiors have the clearance required to control this system.

COBRA by design prevents anything else from ever being possible.

SO, No stinking any one other than COINTEL PRO, CIA, and NSA SHILLS can touch it.

As I said before it is designed expressly to wage false flag cyber terror and facilitate martial law and information control as a function of this weapon.
Logged

"Biotechnology it's not so bad. It's just like all technologies it's in the wrong HANDS!"- Sepultura
Anti_Illuminati
Guest
« Reply #18 on: August 17, 2009, 12:51:19 PM »

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YrcqA_cqRD8
Logged
Anti_Illuminati
Guest
« Reply #19 on: October 26, 2009, 10:12:53 AM »



http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5giMkwo6cFPWD1X-zXg4cgE7v_lIAD9BAG08O1

NM project would link nation's 3 electric grids

By HEATHER CLARK (AP) – Oct 13, 2009

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Officials announced an ambitious project in New Mexico on Tuesday that would allow energy to flow more freely across the nation's three massive power grids, breaking down significant barriers to ramping up alternative energy in the United States.

The proposed Tres Amigas SuperStation in Clovis, N.M., would help route energy from isolated wind and solar installations to urban centers and other places that consume the most power.

New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who served as President Bill Clinton's energy secretary, said the transmission station would be "historic."

"This is going to be the largest power converter in the world, making New Mexico the meeting place for America's electricity needs," he said at a news conference to unveil the project.

The transmission hub would be located across 22 square miles in eastern New Mexico near the Texas border. Clovis was chosen because it is nearest to where the nation's three power grids — called the East, West and Texas interconnections — come closest together.

Tres Amigas would build a triangular pathway of underground superconductor pipelines, combined with AC/DC converters that synchronize the flow of power between the interconnections. The equipment allows electricity to be transferred from grid to grid.

Construction could begin in 2011 or 2012, and the hub could be running in 2013 or 2014, said Phil Harris, chief executive of the Santa Fe-based Tres Amigas.

The pipelines, 3 feet in diameter, contain hair-thin ceramic fibers developed by Devens, Mass.-based American Superconductor and can carry enough electricity to power 2.5 million homes.

"That's how we're going to break the power gridlock in this country," said Greg Yurek, the company's founder and chief executive.

American Superconductor has partnered with scientists at Los Alamos, Oak Ridge and Argonne national laboratories for two decades to develop the superconductor, which already is being used in Columbus, Ohio; and Long Island and Albany, N.Y., Yurek said.

Harris, a New Mexico native, said the transmission hub will have a 5-gigawatt capacity but will be built for an ultimate capacity of 30 gigawatts to move renewable energy out of the Southwest to the rest of the nation.

Richardson said the station would "help enormously" to lessen the effects of blackouts and brownouts in the East and West.

While the nation's need for renewable energy is driving the building of the hub, the transmission station could also transmit power from a nuclear or coal-powered facility.

"You've got a major oilfield here, but it's in terms of wind and solar, so let's tap that," Harris said. "We truly couldn't unleash the potential of renewables unless we found a way to put these grids together."

New Mexico alone has a potential capacity to produce 27 gigawatts of renewable energy, he said.

The Tres Amigos hub will employ 50 people and could potentially generate $4 billion in revenue annually, Richardson said. It would make money from fees utilities would pay to buy and sell electricity over the hub.

Yurek said the next step for the project is to file a request with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which regulates the rates and terms and conditions of use for the East and West interconnections. Texas regulates its own grid.

But locating and building the physical connection between the grid and Tres Amigas' station would be under the purview of the states involved, said Mary O'Driscoll, a FERC spokeswoman.

O'Driscoll said Tres Amigas has not yet made any formal requests to FERC concerning the project.
On the Net:

    * Tres Amigas: http://www.tresamigasllc.com
Logged
Anti_Illuminati
Guest
« Reply #20 on: October 26, 2009, 10:20:17 AM »

http://albuquerque.bizjournals.com/albuquerque/stories/2009/10/12/daily24.html

Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Huge electric transmission project planned near Clovis
New Mexico Business Weekly

Gov. Bill Richardson has unveiled plans for a huge electric transmission superstation near Clovis in eastern New Mexico.

The project, called the Tres Amigas Super Station, will link the nation’s three main power grids to allow for more efficient delivery of renewable energy, said Richardson in a news release.

“New Mexico leads the way in green and renewable energy development,” Richardson said. “But we need the ability to send energy produced in New Mexico to surrounding states. Tres Amigas will break that barrier, creating a larger market for our energy. New Mexico is proud to be chosen as the site for this unique renewable energy market hub.”

U.S. Sen. Jeff Bingaman, D-NM, said the project will help build a needed transmission backbone to support emerging renewable energy generation nationwide.

“By tying the nation’s three power grids together, the Tres Amigas station will catalyze the adoption of renewable power while at the same time increasing the reliability of our electricity network, which is fundamental to the expansion of the U.S. economy,” Bingaman said.

The station will include three voltage-source AC/DC power converters connected to 20 miles of gigawatt-scale superconductor DC power cables. The structure will create a triangular electricity pathway similar to highway rotaries used to control traffic flows.

Multi-power transmission lines will carry energy from each of the nation’s three main power grids into and out of the superstation.

The project will use high-temperature superconductor wire developed by Los Alamos National Laboratory, Richardson said.

Phil Harris, CEO of Tres Amigas LLC — which will build and operate the project — said the system will add more reliability and security to U.S. power supplies, while encouraging more renewable energy development.

“Utilizing the latest advances in power grid technology, Tres Amigas will serve as a renewable energy market hub by connecting all three of America’s power grids to enable the transfer of green power from region to region,” Harris said.

American Superconductor Corp. (NASDAQ: AMSC), a global energy technologies company that is part owner of Tres Amigas LLC, will supply superconductor electricity pipelines and transmission planning expertise for the project.
Logged
Pages: [1]   Go Up
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.17 | SMF © 2011, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!