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Deploying Smart Grids can help Egypt economy diversify from oil and gas – Booz Allen Hamilton

Deploying Smart Grids can help Egypt economy diversify from oil and gas – Booz Allen Hamilton

Deploying Smart Grids can help Egypt economy diversify from oil and gas – Booz Allen Hamilton


•    Smart Grids can help lay the foundations for energy and cost-saving applications and renewable energy development in the MENA region


•    The utilities sector and the society stands to greatly benefit from wider adoption of smart grid technologies in the future


•    Developed countries are already leveraging smart grids to fulfill key priorities relating to energy efficiency and reliability

 


The utilities sector has historically under-invested in information technology (IT), but an increasing number of utility companies in the MENA region are waking up to the benefits of smart technology – particularly smart grids, a Booz Allen Hamilton report has found.

 

 

 

 

 

 


aTP-  Arab tourism portal News- Cairo – The Economic Development Conference in Sharm Al-Sheikh (Egypt) in March 2015 concluded a series of investment deals for Egypt that will expand the national energy grid to provide 5.2 GW of generating capacity annually until 2022 to meet the massive domestic demand. In line with the national energy strategy, an additional $1.6b project was signed with Saudi Arabia to develop an integrated electricity network that will boost servicing capacity by 3,000 MW. Investments into core energy infrastructure and diversification in the energy sector convey Egypt’s intention to become an interregional electricity hub.

In its latest report, Switched On: How MENA Can Build Smart Grid Success, Booz Allen states that customizing smart grid strategies to suit an organization’s objectives and mitigate challenges,  while focusing on business transformation will determine the successful adoption of smart grids in Egypt.


Smart grids are a convergence of the electric power, communications and IT industries, built on the foundations of advanced metering infrastructure, or AMI—an integrated system that enables two-way communication between utilities and their customers.


Using a blend of classic electric grid with information, communication and control technologies, smart grids help utilities companies overcome many of the operating and customer service obstacles that stand in their way, thus delivering results for both companies and consumers.

The result is greater control over the production, transmission, distribution and retail of electricity, as well as increased efficiency along with the reduced consumption and cost of energy.

Dr. Walid Fayad, executive vice president at Booz Allen Hamilton MENA, says: “Utilities have traditionally been slow to adopt digital technologies, focusing instead on the operations technologies that enable their core business of generating, transmitting and distributing power. In doing so, they have typically taken a reluctant approach to IT, viewing it as a necessary evil for customer management and revenue collection.

 

 

“Increasingly, however, we are seeing that MENA utility companies are becoming open to employing smart grid technologies to manage their operations more efficiently.


Smart grids provide an opportunity for the region to modernize its infrastructure and lay the foundations for renewable energy development which can help economic diversification.”


The way forward

The benefits of a smart grid are manifold, including opening up new opportunities for renewable energy production and storage. They also help cost-cutting, system upgrading and maintenance, and improve customer service to end-consumers.


Furthermore, smart grids introduce new metering, billing and payment methods, as well as greater access to, and accuracy of, data and information for customers and utilities alike.


Several developed countries are already leveraging the smart grid to fulfill a number of key priorities, which relate primarily to energy efficiency and reliability. Utilities in North America, for example, have focused on distribution automation and transmission modernization to fulfil their goals.


But alongside any digital innovation come challenges and it is imperative that utilities companies fully understand these before they develop their smart grid strategies.

 


Dr. Adham Sleiman, vice president, Booz Allen Hamilton MENA, says: “Utility companies must remember that smart grid is not a one-size-fits-all solution. To optimize the investment that utilities make, the smart grid must be tailored to address the specific goals and challenges faced by each organization.”

“For the region’s utilities to be successful in their smart grid strategies, they must take a more effective approach to technology selection, proofing and piloting, and focus efforts on developing solid strategies that take smart grid ambitions beyond the pilot, making tangible and lasting impact on the ground,” Dr. Sleiman concluded.

 

 

 

 

 

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