Itron Inspire
Utility Insights on the Accelerating Energy Transition
Industry leaders, customers and partners sat down with Stephanie Koldoziej, portfolio director, transmission and distribution at Clarion Events, at Itron Inspire 2023 to share their perspectives on how cities and utilities are adapting to the energy transition and the challenges and opportunities that come with it.
Check out the interviews below to hear what these leaders had to say and keep reading to get the highlights:
- Stefan Zschiegner, Itron: Grid Edge
- Dan Pfeiffer, Itron: IIJA and Utilities
- Tom Deitrich, Itron: Preparing for the Energy Transition
- Marina Donovan, Itron: Resourcefulness Insight Report
- Carlos Lopez, Itron: Smart Cities
- Jenifer Picciurro, Las Vegas Valley Water District: Resourcefulness Award
- Torrey Cardinalli, Verizon Global Enterprise: Utilities and Private Networks
- Robert Puente, San Antonio Water System: Utilities and Shared Success
Exploring the Grid Edge
Itron’s Stefan Zschiegner, vice president of product management for Outcomes, discusses the challenges and opportunities facing utilities at the grid edge. The transition to renewable energy, the adoption of electric vehicles and changes in consumer behavior are all happening at the grid edge, which is impacting utilities’ ability to maintain visibility and control into the distribution grid. This presents an opportunity for utilities to engage stakeholders and upgrade infrastructure to ensure resilient, reliable and safe energy and water delivery to their communities. In collaboration with our ecosystem of technology partners, Itron can help utilities approach these challenges in a way that is open, flexible and agile to their needs today and in the future.
The Role of IIJA in the Energy Transition
Itron’s Dan Pfeiffer, vice president of government and regulatory
affairs, discusses how the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act
(IIJA) is helping utilities and cities meet their grid infrastructure
goals as well as how the legislation differs from the American
Recovery and Investment Act (ARRA), enacted in 2009. Pfeiffer
highlights the size of grants as a big differentiator. While ARRA
awarded much larger grants, the IIJA is distributing more of them. In
addition, ARRA’s focus was on carbon reduction and creating jobs,
while the IIJA focuses on those pieces in addition to environmental
justice, equity and union jobs. The IIJA also places a higher priority
on serving disadvantaged urban and rural communities. Project
proposals that are geared toward underserved areas are more likely to
receive grant funding.
Creating a More Sustainable Future
Itron’s president and CEO, Tom Deitrich, discusses the impact of
the energy transition on electric, gas and water utilities and how
they can prepare for the challenges and opportunities ahead. Tom
highlights two main components of the transition. The first is the
shift to a cleaner, more sustainable future by Integrating renewables
into the grid, which includes the generation side down to the
distributed energy resources (DERs) at the edge of the grid. The
second component underscores the importance of creating reliable and
affordable solutions utilities can put in place. Tom emphasizes that
reliability and resiliency are top priorities for utilities moving
forward in addition to increased engagement with consumers as the
energy transition forges ahead.
Recapping the Resourcefulness Insight Report
Marina Donovan, vice president of global marketing, ESG and
public affairs, discusses the findings of Itron’s Resourcefulness
Insight Report, which explores the impacts of the energy transition on
utilities. This year, Itron partnered with Public Utilities
Fortnightly to interview 10 state commissioners and 250 utility
executives from across the United States to get their perspective on
the opportunities and barriers they see coming as the energy
transition progresses and how they expect to meet these hurdles head
on. The report highlighted the increase in public demand as a big
driver of the accelerating transition, barriers utilities are facing,
including infrastructure upgrades and technology investments, as well
as the need for ongoing education and dialogue among consumers, policy
makers, regulators and utilities.
Illuminating Smarter Cities
Itron’s Carlos Lopez, senior product marketing manager, discusses
the role of smart streetlights in creating smart cities. Streetlights
are an essential community service and consume as much as 40 percent
of a municipal energy budget. Streetlights are also the second largest
user of electricity, below energy from buildings. As legacy
streetlights continue to be failure prone and costly with labor
intensive maintenance, cities are converting to LEDs and smart
lighting systems, which can reduce energy and operational costs by 50
percent or more. With Itron’s smart lighting systems, cities and
utilities can utilize streetlights as an asset for safety that enables
social and economic vitality in their communities.
Resourcefulness Award Interview
Jenifer Picciurro, customer care and field service specialist
with Las Vegas Valley Water District (LVVWD), discusses the utility’s
award-winning water program. Up against a 20-year drought, the
utility’s number one concern continues to be conservation, which led
to the implementation of advanced metering infrastructure (AMI). This
enables LVVWD to obtain data and automate processes, such as customer
notification if their usage is high due to a leak, malfunction, etc.
Jenifer shares that automation and real-time communication with
customers have made the transition seamless and built the foundation
for the utility’s continued success with their water conservation efforts.
Leveraging the Benefits of Private Networks
Torrey Cardinalli, managing director of enterprise sales at
Verizon Global Enterprise, discusses private networks and their role
in enabling grid visibility for utilities. Private networks represent
the next era of networking generations from cellular wireless
providers. Everyone is familiar with public networks, but private
networks bring more visibility and control to utilities and
enterprises. With more visibility and control, utilities can get a
better understanding of how their networks are performing and make
changes more dynamically, ultimately ensuring their network and the
grid are more resilient, reliable, safe and efficient.
Utility Collaboration and Shared Success
Robert Puente, president and CEO of San Antonio Water System,
discusses the water utility’s collaboration with CPS Energy and
challenges that are unique to their service area. In addition, Robert
discusses the tremendous success of their water conservation programs,
which have allowed the utility to use the same amount of water today
as they were 30 years ago despite the massive growth in the community.
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