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NETWORK / 19 / JULY/AUGUST 2017 I n the UK and Ireland, it's no surprise to most that a large proportion of secondary distribution sites are uncon- nected – or at the very least are connected with the most basic forms of telecommunication. These include satellite, which is expensive; X.25, old packet systems that are disappearing; or maybe even UHF scanning telemetry, which is narrowband and specific to certain functions. These methods have served for decades in supporting telecontrol, but as we move towards new services for aspiring distribution system operators (DSOs) then perhaps there is a lesson to be learned from the East where 4G systems have been widely deployed and delivered a private "predictable" fabric that supports a multitude of needs, such as voice for field maintenance; data, which sup- ports SCADA with predictable latency; and internet of things for metering. Creating predictable and wide-area LV control and moni- toring of distribution networks with eLTE systems is desir- able, and now quite possible, if the right spectrum is put on the table. It's all in the private spec- trum. Using the lower frequen- cies of UHF (around 400MHz), the economics of range and reach can be supported at a rea- sonable cost. With the current Ofcom and industry discussion about UHF alignment and shar- ing, it should be feasible in a near future. The lessons from Asia al- ready allow us to have confi- dence in private LTE systems, but until now there has not been any real empirical data to prove that a standards-based tech- nology like eLTE (from 3GPP) that is supported by multiple vendors can meet the needs of DSO grid services. The good news is that things are developing and we hope to publish key results on that in due course. More information at www.huawei. com/ilink/cnenterprise/download/ HW_325041 From advanced metering infrastructure to distribution automation, Private LTE / 4G (eLTE) has been proven and delivered, says Huawei UK's Nigel Nawacki. From East into West INDUSTRY INSIGHT NIGel NawackI HUaweI TecHNoloGIeS Uk Case study Zhuhai distribution automation ProjeCt Zhuhai City in the Guangdong province of China covers an area of 1,701 square kilometers, has a population of 1.58 million and an annual GDP of CNY166.2 billion ($27.11 billion) in 2013. As a national special economic zone and port city, Zhuhai has a high-tech industrial infrastructure. Zhuhai has experienced rapid social and economic development over the past 20 years. New city districts are highly developed, and old town areas are relatively backward. Zhuhai City's power grid serves 640,000 households. The grid consists of 59 substations, 1,027 sets of 10kV power lines with a total length of 5,607km, and 12,163 10kV transform- ers. The grid's maximum load reaches 2.71GW. In 2012, the grid provided a total of 15.56TWh of electric energy. Zhuhai City has tens of thousands of distribution nodes. Most of these nodes are scattered across the 200km 2 main urban districts. To improve power supply reliability and quality, Zhuhai launched its "demonstration area of the intelligent power distribution, consump- tion, and communication solution" in September 2011. During solution development, wired communication faced considerable challenges. Some existing cables were difficult to upgrade. On-site engineering proved to be difficult and time-consum- ing, and even impossible in some old town areas. The Zhuhai power company chose Huawei's eLTE wireless access solution. The solution uses the 1.8GHz private network frequency band to provide broadband wireless data communica- tion services for the distribution auto- mation system. the benefits Several operational benefits can come about when a DNO uses private LTE in its journey to becoming a DSO, namely: l Micro grid con- trol – for exam- ple, frequency responses of solar/wind/EV control require- ments l eLTE services could tackle the DSO problem of micro metro- level control and administration.