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Xcel Energy Smart Grid Boulder connects 200 miles of fiber optic network, 16,000 smart meters, and 4,600 transformers, enabling renewable integration, demand response, outage prevention, and consumer dashboards with the University of Colorado partnership.
The Important Points
A $100M digital grid in Boulder linking fiber, smart meters, and renewables to optimize power, cut emissions, avert outages.
- 200 miles of fiber optic backbone installed
- 16,000 smart meters; 4,600 transformers networked
- Integrates wind and solar with demand response
- Predictive analytics averted four long-term outages
- Customer web portals for real-time energy insights
Xcel Energy has completed work on the infrastructure and launched the remaining software to turn Boulder into what is believed to be the first city ready to plug into the "smart grid."
The Minneapolis-based utility said that the $100 million smart-grid project included stringing 200 miles of fiber optic cable and installing nearly 16,000 smart meters, which provide information to the company and consumer.
About 4,600 residential and small business transformers in the university city of about 100,000 are tied to the system.
"We've essentially tied all the background pieces together," Xcel Energy spokesman Tom Henley said.
The idea behind a smart electrical grid is to develop a digital, flexible system that provides better flow and use of electricity, as Boulder's Smart Grid City status demonstrates in the field.
The company hopes to be able to distribute electricity when and where it's needed, saving millions of dollars and the need for new power plants.
Other companies and communities across the country are installing smart meters and forming partnerships to modernize the electric grid, which has changed little over the last century. The project in Boulder, already progressing toward the first Smart Grid City designation, is thought to be the furthest along, said Ed Legge, spokesman for the Edison Electric Institute, a national trade association of shareholder-owned electric companies.
Xcel Energy, working with a consortium of other companies, started work in May 2008. The other companies include Accenture, Current Group, GridPoint, OSIsoft, Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories, SmartSynch and Ventyx.
The utility said the system has already helped it avert four potential long-term outages by getting warnings that transformers were ready to fail.
Henley said the next steps include giving customers with smart meters Internet access to monitor and personalize their energy use. Xcel Energy has at least another 9,000 smart meters ready to be installed for interested customers.
Xcel Energy and its partners have worked with the University of Colorado in Boulder as they transform the industry through this effort. The university chancellor's residence was turned into a showcase for the effort. Former Chancellor G.P. "Bud" Peterson and his wife, Val, used a laptop computer to set their thermostats and check their energy use. They drove a plug-in electric hybrid SUV provided by Xcel Energy.
The vehicle draws energy from the grid and feeds energy back. The utility is working on converting more vehicles for Boulder County to use.
Henley said several companies and government organizations, including regulators from other countries, have toured Boulder to learn about the project.
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