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UL and The Smart Grid

UL and The Smart Grid. January 25, 2012 Derek Greenauer Global Government Affairs Manager UL LLC Derek.Greenauer@ul.com. WE ARE A GLOBAL FORCE FOR GOOD. At UL, our mission of working for a safer world since 1894 is at the core of everything we do.

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UL and The Smart Grid

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  1. UL and The Smart Grid January 25, 2012 Derek Greenauer Global Government Affairs Manager UL LLC Derek.Greenauer@ul.com

  2. WE ARE A GLOBAL FORCE FOR GOOD • At UL, our mission of working for a safer world since 1894 is at the core of everything we do. • Advancing safety through careful research and investigation • Preventing or reducing loss of life and property • Promoting safe living and working environments for all people

  3. DELIVERING UNMATCHED EXPERTISE & THOUGHT LEADERSHIP • From the adoption of electricity to the advent of wireless interoperability, UL is the leading voice for global safety. Our deep knowledge and expertise make us invaluable in: • Developing standards • Creating codes • Researching safety breakthroughs • Helping customers design, produce, package and sell safer products

  4. WE PROVIDE GLOBAL MARKET ACCEPTANCE Our Marks are on more than 23 billion products worldwide, per year, signalingpeace of mind to consumers, customers, businesses and governments.

  5. AND HELP YOU NAVIGATE GLOBAL TRADE • UL helps you navigate: • Complex country compliance issues • Regulatory and trade challenges • Marketplace demands • Supply chain management

  6. THE DEFINITION OF SAFETY IS CONSTANTLY EVOLVING • Safety is evolving. Complex issues of today have replaced concerns of the past. And the safety landscape of tomorrow is yet to be defined. • Chemicals • Food and water • Infrastructure • Initial adoption of electricity • Medical devices • Nanotechnology • New sustainability breakthroughs • Renewable energy • Wireless integration

  7. Smart Grid domain architecture – products Transmission & Distribution Industrial/ Consumer Generation Meter Factory/ Building Automation, HEMS, EV • Transformers • Insulators • Disconnect Switches • Switchgear • Power conversion equipment • Substation equipment • Large Wind • Photovoltaic • Energy Storage • Invertors • Small Wind • Meters • Smart Enabled Appliances • Plug-In Electric Vehicles

  8. Smart Grid offers demand side management and load leveling opportunities • Smart Grid benefits • Allows the usage of power more efficiently, reducing GHG emissions and increasing reliability of electricity service. • Enables load leveling of electricity supply and demand, so that more variable, renewable energy can be added to the grid. • Empowers consumers, enabling them to exercise more control over their use of electricity Electricity supplier Electricity consumer Charge decision Home and Industrial Automation Intelligent grid Demand analysis Vehicle to grid Creates a new world of automated and control based device components and systems that are needed to support a more efficiently functioning grid

  9. Smart Grid Concerns Include Communications Protocol Fire & Electrical Safety Communication Protocols Software Cyber Security Functional Safety Interoperability

  10. Changes in network monitoring and control systems requires evaluation of new features but also raises safety and security concerns Do I interfere with other devices? Can I connect? Can I be hacked? Do I respond correctly to right input Can I work with others? Is the data collected private?

  11. Global Opportunities The worldwide smart grid market will grow from $20B USD in revenue in 2010 to $100B USD by 2030.4

  12. Industry needs to define opportunity and alleviate customer concerns • Customer concerned with new-legacy equipment compatibility and increased costs • End users expect device to operate within a system and struggle with evolving cyber-threats “Consumer perceptions may be at odds with the smart grid value proposition as portrayed by the utilities. Consumers are also concerned about data privacy”1 “…for utilities, there are still barriers we need to overcome. Several examples include the need to change consumer behavior, ensure cost-effectiveness, overcome financial constraints and perceived grid complexity, and maintain grid reliability and cyber security. Policies, legislation, regulations and international technical standards are still being formulated and are continuously-evolving.”2 We believe standards are the only path to interoperability. We believe that by standardizing as many architecture layers as possible, we'll get economies of scale and higher-quality products. “Without proper testing and certification, using an agreed-upon set of criteria, you can't trust that devices are actually interoperable,”3 • Christina Haddad; “Smart grid engagement: what customers expect” Smart Grid News.com; Nov. 22, 2011; http://www.smartgridnews.com/artman/publish/Business_Business_Case/Smart-grid-consumer-engagement-what-customers-expect-4256.htm • Matt Gilmore –Consumers Energy (Smart Grid Today October 2011) • “MD and CEO of Dubai Electricity and Water Authority delivers keynote speech at Smart Grids Conference” AMEInfo.com; Nov. 22, 2011; http://www.ameinfo.com/281941.html?n=industry_Energy,%20oil%20and%20gas

  13. Industrial Cyber Security • As industrial control systems rely more on computer and network systems to monitor and control processes, security problems can be passed on to industrial processes, putting production and human safety at risk. Cyber-attacks can damage or shut down critical infrastructure such as the electric power grid, water treatment plants and oil and gas pipelines. • Examples: • In July 2010, Stuxnet virus infiltrated an Iranian nuclear facility and changed the rotational speed of the motors that a Siemens PLCs controlled, allegedly setting Iran back 2-3 years from developing a nuclear weapon. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C2qd6xXbySk&feature=player_detailpage

  14. IEC61400 – 25 • DLMS/COSEM • SML • IEC62056-21 • IEC62056-31 Euridis • EN13757 M-Bus • Zigbee • Wifi Typical Communication and Interoperability Standards in Smart Grid Network Substations (Wind Fram or Solar Power Plant) Substations Multi-Utility Meter Handheld terminal • DLMS/COSEM • SML • IEC62056-21 • IEC62056-31 Euridis • EN13757 M-Bus • Zigbee • Wifi • IEC 62351 • IEC61850 • IEC60870-5 • IEC61968-9 • DLMS/COSEM • GSM/GPRS/UMITS • Internet Meter & Gateway • DLMS/COSEM • SML • IEC61334 PLC • OFDM Type 1 (PRIME) • OFDM Type 2 (G3-PLC) • SMITP (Meter & More) • Zigbee Smart Energy • Home Plug • Wireless M-Bus • BACNet • LonTalk • KNX • Wifi • Z-Wave • DECT • M-Bus • Wavenis Central System Grid Control Centre (Billing, OMS, GIS) Data Concentrator Smart Grid Supply Side • DLMS/COSEM • GSM/GPRS/UMITS • Internet End customer devices Smart Grid Demand Side Smart Home Smart Grid

  15. UL’s Involvement • Voting member of SGIP (Smart Grid Interoperability Panel) • Alignment with Testing & Certification Vendors • Voting member of SGTCC (Smart Grid Testing & Certification Committee) • Significant involvement in Working Group 4: Interoperability Process Reference Manual (IPRM) Working Group • Chair of Working Group 5: Laboratory Qualification Criteria • Chair of Working Group 8: IPRM Implementation • Monitoring PAPs (Priority Action Plans) for impact on UL’s standards and safety certifications • Participation with Pecan Street (www.pecanstreet.org) test bed in Austin, TX

  16. UL Smart Grid Service Offerings • Functional Safety / software evaluations, Personnel Certification & Advisory services • Smart Meter & AMI Testing services to IEC & ANSI product standards & protocols • Electric Vehicles – Development of standards / specifications and Product Certification for On & Off board components, EV Infrastructure (EVI) • Renewable Energy – Solar – Grid Interoperability, Testing & standard development • Energy Efficiency Testing services for Lighting, Appliances & Motors • WiSE – Accredited Wireless, Interoperability, Security & Payments testing and advisory services

  17. Subject 2744: Safety of Products in Smart Environments • Scope • Products intended to interact with the Smart Grid, generally known as “Smart Products,” which includes “Smart Appliances” • Base Requirements • Environmental Noise • EMI / EMC (Emissions, Immunity) • Functional Safety • IEC 61508 • Tamper Detection • Networked product subject to unauthorized access

  18. Smart Enabled Appliances • UL has developed Safety standards supplements (CRDs) for the following smart enabled products: • Electric Clothes Dryers (UL 2158) • Household Refrigerators and Freezers (UL 250) • Household Electric Storage Tank Water Heaters (UL 174) • Energy Management Equipment (UL 916) • UL is in the process of developing supplemental requirements for: • Electric Clothes Washers (UL 2157) • Household Ranges/Cooktops (UL 858) • Microwave Ovens (UL 923) • Household Dishwashers (UL 749) • UL is in the process of working with industry to assess the need for these type of supplemental requirements in HVAC equipment and lighting products. • These requirements are intended to be used in conjunction with the basic safety standard to ensure that smart enabled functionality does not impact the overall safety of the appliance or equipment

  19. Smart Meters • UL tests electronic electricity meters to the following global requirements: • USA: ANSI C12.1, C12.10, C12.20, UL414 • Australia: AS62052-11/21, AS62053-21/23, AS62054-21 • Europe: EN50470 Part 1 & 3 • IEC: IEC62052-11/21, IEC62053-21/22/23, IEC62054-21 and IEC62055-31 • In addition to safety testing, UL also offers additional services to include Surge tests, EMI, Wireless Regulatory testing • ANSI C62.41(Surge), UL2735 (UL Utility meter standard), UL2745 (UL Meter communication module adaptor standard), FCC part 15C (USA Wireless standard for meter with RF module) • UL is also in process to be accredited as notified body under EU MID requirement and plans to offer MID service in Q2/2012. • UL is also developing the conforming test service for metering protocol standard like ANSI C12.18, 19, 21 and 22 as well as IEC62056

  20. Questions?

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