Utility Week

Utility Week 23 November 2018

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UTILITY WEEK | 23RD - 29TH NOVEMBER 2018 | 19 Operations & Assets Operations & Assets £3 million scheme to upgrade pump- ing stations and reduce the risk of flooding in Great Yarmouth and an ambitious project to relocate Cam- bridge's wastewater recycling facility. Clare Kovaks, 4D planner at the Anglian Water @one Alliance, said: "The models from Bluesky are an important starting point when devel- oping a digital project environment. They enable us to create understand- able but still accurate visualisations that are used at every stage of the project lifecycle. We use them to inform designs, communicate ideas and gather public support." If you have an asset or project you would like to see featured in this slot, please send pictures and details to: paulnewton@fav-house.com. Market view A new standard for critical IoT Utility networks require secure, standardised communications protocols, and IEEE 802.16s fits the bill, says Kathy Nelson. T he European electricity sector is undergoing a transformation in an effort to modernise and secure the power grid. Grid modernisation involves the development of the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) or Mission-Critical Internet of Things (MC-IoT). The challenge, however, is that IIoT and MC-IoT require increased connectivity provided by secure and reliable wireless field area networks in order to communicate with remote monitoring and control technologies. Unfortunately, most available network solutions were not designed to support the continuously changing demands of the MC-IoT. Electricity utilities need standard technology options to deploy highly reliable networks on private radio spectrum. While wireless standards exist for broadband spectrum, until recently there has not been a standard technology that could be used on a narrow frequency. The wide band channels available are higher cost, which leaves utilities facing proprietary technology solu- tions, or relying on commercial carriers, which do not have the reliability and availability for mission critical applications. Proprietary solutions, regardless of the size of the technology vendor or provider, pose multiple chal- lenges to utilities. While a proprietary solution may meet demands and provide a sound design at the time of purchase, utilities face the constant risk that the vendor may go out of business or discontinue the product line, leaving customers unsupported. Even if the customer has asked for intellectual property to be put in escrow as a precaution in case such a situation occurs, the customer would need to find a manufacturer willing to develop that product for them. In many cases, that is not a possibility. As a solution, a grass roots effort was undertaken in 2015 by electric utilities, manufacturers, and research organisations to create a modification to the existing IEEE 802.16 standard, also known as WiMAX. This standard was ratified and published in October 2017 and is now known globally as IEEE 802.16s. IEEE 802.16s is a narrow channel amendment to the IEEE 802.16 standard and allows operation in suffi- ciently narrow channel sizes. Because it does not specify frequency band, it is flexible and can be used in any frequency range. With IEEE 802.16s, utilities and other critical infrastructure entities will have more vendor and product options, flexibility, and stability as they purchase solutions to enable MC-IoT in the future. Kathy Nelson, director of technical product marketing and industry relations, Ondas Networks

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