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NextAxiom HyperServices: Smart Grid as a Service Case Study

July 7, 2014
The Smart Grid Vision future: IT& energy operations convergence, consumer participation and empowerment, new market emergence, and improved security reliability.  Content brought to you by: 

The Smart Grid Vision: 21st Century Utility Industry Transformation

Forward-thinkers in the electricity industry have unified around the 21st century vision of the ‘smart grid'— an intelligent, IT-advantaged approach to power delivery and power markets. Over the long term, the smart grid vision seeks to transform the utility industry by making it more customer-interactive, more self-healing (in the event of a power disruption), and more defensible in the event of a cyber-attack or natural disaster.

The Smart Grid Vision

In the near term, the smart grid vision is focused on:

IT & Energy Operations Convergence: Baked into the smart grid vision is the notion of Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI), also referred to as ‘smart meters'. Smart meters, unlike legacy meters, enable always-on 2-way interactivity between utilities and their customers. Smart meters enable improved operations, labor savings, and enhanced visibility into energy consumption.

Consumer Participation & Empowerment: The smart grid vision also speaks directly to the issue of empowering consumers to participate directly in the future success of the grid through more intelligent and cost-effective consumption of electric power, as well as to profitably make their own renewable energy (e.g. home based solar) available for resale by the utility industry.

Example of solar panels on homes. Photo Credits: ebobeldijk

New Market Emergence: While IT/operations convergence and expanded customer empowerment are outstanding benefits in and of themselves, the smart grid vision goes further—enabling new energy- related markets to emerge. For example, with a smart grid foundation in place, a new generation of ‘smart appliances' are on the horizon, as well as consumer self-directed ‘smart home' management services. Additionally, the smart grid vision will accelerate adoption of green renewable energy (solar, wind), as well as greener battery-powered vehicles.

MIAMI, FL - FEBRUARY 19: People look at a Tesla Motors vehicle on the showroom floor at the Dadeland Mall on February 19, 2014 in Miami, Florida. Tesla said today it earned $46 million in the fourth quarter on a non-adjusted basis, or 33 cents a share, causing shares in the company to jump 12 percent. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Improved Security & Reliability: In the post-9/11 world, critical infrastructure like electric utilities are now perceived as potential targets for both physical and cyber-attack—and can benefit from the improved security and system reliability baked into the smart grid vision. Additionally, when outages do occur, the system as a whole is more reliable and self-healing—while providing utilities and consumers with near-real-time visibility into events occurring on the grid.

For large, well-capitalized utilities, smart grid experimental pilots and field deployments have been underway for some time. But for many utilities, the large capital investments necessary to deliver on the promise of the smart grid have become prohibitive, especially against the background of a challenged economy. This economic speed bump can really slow down smart grid adoption. Technology innovator Leidos (PKA, SAIC) has creatively addressed this through their game- changing Smart Grid-as-a-Service offering.

Leidos (PKA, SAIC) Smart Grid-as-a-Service:  Changing the Game in Smart Grid Adoption

Leidos, previously known as, Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC) is a scientific, engineering, and technology applications company that uses its deep domain knowledge to solve problems of vital importance to the nation and the world, in national security, energy & environment, health and cybersecurity. The company's approximately 41,000 employees serve customers in the U.S. Department of Defense, the intelligence community, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, other U.S. Government civil agencies and selected commercial markets. Headquartered in McLean, Va., Leidos (PKA, SAIC) had annual revenues of approximately $10.6 billion for its fiscal year ended January 31, 2012.

Within the smart grid industry, Leidos (PKA, SAIC) has emerged as a first mover and first prover in delivering cloud-advantaged Smart Grid-as-a-Service or SGS. Leidos (PKA, SAIC) SGS offering was designed from the ground up to remove smart grid barriers to adoption for local utilities. How? By providing a modular, customizable, affordable subscription service that enables utility management to focus on their core business of energy operations—not the complexity of IT systems development and integration that goes hand in hand with smart grid enablement.

Leidos' SGS also enables local utilities to leapfrog beyond the pilot phase of smart grid experimentation, and move confidently into a smart grid future with total ROI clarity and zero obsolescence. Additionally, Leidos (PKA, SAIC)'s SGS offering, while leveraging the systems best practices and scale economics of large utilities, is not tied to any one infrastructure vendor roadmap— making SGS a true game changer in the smart grid market.

Leidos (PKA, SAIC) Smart Grid-as-a-Service makes available the full spectrum of smart grid functionality, including:

  • Smart Meters: installation and deployment of meters and smart meter head end
  • Field Communications: including real-time outage alerts
  • Enhanced Security: for defense against cyber-attacks
  • Cross-Application IT Integration: including back-office applications, business process customization, and both consumer and management portal development.

Validating its game-changing SGS strategy, Leidos (PKA, SAIC) was awarded a contract by Intelligent Energy Systems (IES) for smart grid solutions for four Alaskan communities.  Leidos (PKA, SAIC) and IES implemented Leidos (PKA, SAIC)'s Smart Grid- as-a-Service at these locations, and services have been on-line and running since December 2011.

The Alaskan deployment of SGS, an integrated hardware and software solution, provides advanced metering infrastructure, outage alerts, remote connection capabilities, as well as lays the foundation for the future integration of fuel, water, temperature, and alternative energy metering. Leidos (PKA, SAIC)'s SGS provides a complete community energy management environment on an OPEX subscription basis—just what was needed to lower energy costs and reduce dependence on expensive diesel fuel that has historically devastated local village economies.

The challenges of climate, environment, and information technology are especially great in these regions...Smart Grid-as-a-Service will deliver the immediate advantage of on-demand meter reads, improved operational efficiency, as well as reduced energy cost, and will support critical energy management decisions throughout the remote regions of Alaska."

- Steve Root, Assistant Vice President, Leidos (PKA, SAIC)

As a core ingredient of the SGS solution, Leidos (PKA, SAIC) leveraged NextAxiom's hyperService Platform to provide must-have cross-silo integration and unified intelligent information flow.

NextAxiomhyperServices

NextAxiomhyperServices: Intelligent Information Flow for Smart Grid-as-a-Service An important design criteria for Leidos (PKA, SAIC)'s offering was to enable intelligent information flow across all devices and line of business applications encompassed by the game-changing vision of cloud-powered Smart Grid-as-a-Service. Rather than get locked in to the capital-intensive roadmaps and proprietary add-ons of legacy enterprise middleware vendors, Leidos (PKA, SAIC) selected NextAxiom's hyperService Platform to serve as the foundation of, and provide the universal building blocks for, all cross-silo integration within the SGS cloud service.

In the words of Tim Crowell, Lead Architect of Leidos (PKA, SAIC) SGS offering, "With NextAxiom hyperServices we get a built-in services oriented architecture or ‘automatic SOA' right out of the box."

With the automatic SOA capability inherent in the NextAxiom Platform, any hyperService can be consumed as a standards-based Web Service operation by line-of-business applications—and vice- versa, any external Web Service operation can be consumed automatically as a managed hyperService. A hyperService solution is composed of in-memory hyperService building blocks all the way down the solution stack, and is inherently service-oriented at both design-time and runtime.

Unification of the entire IT software stack in a virtualized environment resulting in a silo-free development and runtime environment

In addition to NextAxiom's automatic SOA capability, the Leidos Smart Grid-as-a-Service offering leverages many additional capabilities of the NextAxiom Intelligent Information Flow Platform, including:

Universality: To deliver on the promise of SGS, many different line-of-business applications need to be coherently orchestrated to support a unified user experience. This requirement is addressed via the hyperService approach pioneered and proven by NextAxiom. A NextAxiom hyperService is a universal building block that can represent any application or system function, regardless of the underlying architecture. This capability of the NextAxiom platform enables hyperServices to transform functions from heterogeneous systems into universal, homogeneous building blocks, thus incrementally eliminating application silos. This capability is foundational to NextAxiom's mission of enabling the silo-free enterprise. For example, within the SGS offering, NextAxiom hyperServices serve as building blocks of intelligent information flow connecting the outage and GIS systems to the customer portal—a must- have capability for a smart grid system.

Location Transparency: The hyperServices utilized by Leidos' breakthrough cloud-based, Smart Grid- as-a-Service are essentially virtualized programming building blocks that are transparently distributed across cores, servers and datacenters whether on-premise or in the cloud.  For example, once an on- premise application function is represented as a hyperService, it can be accessed seamlessly from the cloud or a device, e.g. a smart meter.

Granular Management: In mission critical infrastructure like Smart Grid-as-a-Service, full granular management is a must-have. NextAxiom hyperServices are fully managed building blocks that are automatically secured, traced, logged, monitored, metered, provisioned and governed. Any hyperService can also be automatically cached or scheduled. With hyperService solutions, granular management and instrumentation is not an afterthought; it is built-into the core of the hyperService Virtual machine.

"Metered" Pay-for-Use Pricing: Leidos' Smart Grid-as-a-Service was built to drive adoption—not only with outstanding functionality—but with its breakthrough subscription pricing model. NextAxiom's Intelligent Information Flow Platform is well-positioned to support this game-changing approach with its innovative ‘metered pricing' plan. NextAxiom's metered model dramatically drives down the level of innovation risk by enabling cloud innovators like Leidos to engage with NextAxiom via pay-for- use pricing for each invoked hyperService. Simply stated, the metering model is based on the number of hyperServices that are executed by the hyperService platform. So, each time a hyperService runs, the hyperService meter registers a click. To put this in the context of well-known industry standards, a Web Service Operation (WSDL/SOAP) once imported into the hyperService Platform becomes one atomic hyperService, and when that hyperService executes, a click is registered on the meter.

By experiencing a compelling ROI on each incremental hyperService developed, the customer and partner benefits to be derived from wider adoption of the NextAxiom platform become self-evident. In the words of Tim Crowell of Leidos (PKA, SAIC), "NextAxiom's metered subscription use pricing is well-aligned with our own game-changing approach to driving adoption of smart grid innovation. And their responsiveness to our requests for SGS-centric enhancements, e.g. strong security, demonstrates their commitment to partnering with innovators like Leidos (PKA, SAIC)."

Summary: Next Vision, Next Game-Change, NextAxiom

The ‘smart grid' vision—embraced by electric utilities in the U.S. and around the world—promises a cleaner, more reliable, more cost-effective and more customer-friendly approach to meeting the challenge of 21st century energy markets.

Leidos, a market and technology innovator, built its cloud-powered Smart Grid-as-a-Service offering to change the game in smart grid adoption by enabling world class functionality on a subscription pricing model.

Leidos breakthrough offerings leverage the power of NextAxiom hyperServices to provide cross- application, cross-silo intelligent information flow: a core ingredient of Smart Grid-as-a-Service.

To find out more about the NextAxiom hyperService Platform, and NextAxiom's commitment to enabling the silo-free enterprise, go to www.nextaxiom.com.

 

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