Grid will interconnect customers’ energy technologies, Chris Johns
says in keynote at Edison Foundation Institute for Electric Innovation’s
“Powering the People”
SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
In a keynote address today in Washington, D.C., PG&E President Chris
Johns laid out the company’s vision for a 21st-century power
grid equipped to maximize the use and benefits of a growing array of
advanced energy technologies available to utilities and their customers,
from electric vehicles and rooftop solar to smart appliances and battery
storage.
Johns spoke at “Powering the People: Connected Conversations,” an event
at the Newseum sponsored by the Edison
Foundation Institute for Electric Innovation (IEI). Johns is
co-chair of IEI’s management committee.
Johns said: “Our customers expect us to develop, build and maintain a
grid that allows them to take full advantage of all of the new energy
technology that we are seeing today—and in a way that gives them maximum
flexibility, maximum choice in how they use energy, and ultimately
maximum value. At PG&E, we’re thinking of this type of grid as the Grid
of Things.TM”
Much like the tech industry’s concept of the “internet of things,”
PG&E’s vision of the Grid of ThingsTM is a
“plug-and-play” platform that allows emerging energy technologies to be
interconnected with each other and integrated into the larger grid in
ways that optimize their capabilities and benefits for customers.
Johns discussed several initiatives underway that bring the Grid of
ThingsTM to life, including:
-
A major smart-charging
pilot program with automaker BMW that pays electric vehicle owners
for the use of their batteries as tools in stabilizing the grid.
-
PG&E’s new community
solar program that will give customers the choice to cover either
50 percent or 100 percent of their electricity use with power from
small and midsize solar projects within the utility’s service area.
Johns also discussed the importance of ongoing utility infrastructure
and technology investments to help create the Grid of ThingsTM.
This includes:
-
Smart grid technology to help
the grid “self-heal” to minimize outages.
-
Voltage control technology that manages the two-way flow of
electricity on the grid, given the increasing amount from distributed
resources such as rooftop solar.
-
New infrastructure to enable the broader adoption of electric
vehicles, such as PG&E’s proposed network
of 25,000 EV chargers.
“We have the opportunity to enable an even better, smarter energy future
for our kids and grandkids. And the path to that future runs through the
21st-century electric grid,” Johns said.
About PG&E
Pacific Gas and Electric Company, a subsidiary of PG&E
Corporation (NYSE:PCG), is one of the largest combined natural gas
and electric utilities in the United States. Based in San Francisco,
with more than 20,000 employees, the company delivers some of the
nation’s cleanest energy to nearly 16 million people in Northern and
Central California. For more information, visit www.pge.com/
and www.pge.com/en/about/newsroom/index.page.
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Source: PG&E