Essential Energy Lowers Costs and Carbon Footprint across Australia?s Energy Sector
OpenUtilities
Enables Substation Intelligent Digital Design, Reducing Environmental Impact
and Saving 50% in Costs
Extending Intelligent
Digital Design to Small Capital Projects
With a network spanning
737,000 kilometers, covering approximately 95% of New South Wales, Australia,
Essential Energy distributes electricity services to more than 870,000 homes
and businesses in 1,500 regional, rural, and remote communities. Despite their
large coverage area, Essential Energy has a small customer density of 1.7
customers per square kilometer, resulting in a significantly higher operational
cost to customer ratio than many other distribution network service providers.
With a minimal customer base to finance the maintenance and support of over
184,000 kilometers of power lines held up by 1.4 million poles, and pressure to
lower operating costs, Essential Energy needed to assess their capital works
projects to find a low-cost, low-resource solution.
“How do we lower energy
costs but unlock value across our complete portfolio of works?” asked Matthew
Turvey, senior electrical engineer with the substation design team at Essential
Energy. The company embraces going
digital, so they wanted to create an intelligent digital design system (IDDS).
While intelligent digital design has been available for several years, it has
only been predominantly used on large-scale projects with capital budgets
exceeding AUD 100 million.
Essential Energy’s
substation design team is comprised of less than 15 members who are responsible
for managing the design of all capital investments related to the
refurbishment, replacement, and construction of substation assets. This team
had a goal to bridge the gap between large-budget projects, extending the same
end-to-end benefits of IDDS to small capital works. “There are tens of
thousands of design teams like ours working with state or private utilities
that need a low-cost, low-resource solution so they can also take the next step
to unlock value that an intelligent digital design system can offer,” said
Turvey.
Investigating
Substation Design Processes
Committed to improving
design performance and digital efficiency across their portfolio of works,
Essential Energy and their substation design team selected the Brewarrina
Substation to investigate the substation design process and the feasibility of
using digital technologies to replace time-consuming manual tasks. A 22- to
66-kilovolt rural site with total capacity of approximately 5 megavolt amperes,
the area is prone to severe weather events, including flooding, lightning,
strong winds, and dust storms. These site conditions presented data acquisition
challenges, making traditional on-site surveys dangerous and inefficient in
terms of time and accuracy. Several options, including ground scanning and
LiDAR, were trialed, and the captured images were converted to 3D models and
used as the basis of new designs.
Streamlining
Digital Workflows
Already familiar with
Bentley applications, Essential Energy initiated their IDDS workflow for
Brewarrina by creating digital reality models of the site using ContextCapture.
“The digital reality model is then copied into ProjectWise and forms the
foundation to create both primary and secondary drawings for the project using
Bentley’s OpenUtilities Substation,” said Jess Hammond, senior drawing officer
at Essential Energy. All reality models, CAD drawings, and related documents
were stored and shared via ProjectWise, using links instead of manually sharing
drawing files, which led to eliminating uncontrolled versions. The team used
OpenUtilities Substation for all design and drafting tasks. As a result,
Essential Energy used Bentley’s applications to create an IDDS, enabling
virtual design reviews, and streamlining the design and drawing approval
process.
The interoperability
between Bentley’s applications and Microsoft 365 allowed Essential Energy to
automate conversion of the approved drawings into PDF copies that were
immediately accessible to the on-site construction crews via their mobile
devices, ensuring all relevant parties always had the most up-to-date
information. “It wasn’t until we could take advantage of Bentley’s partnership
with Microsoft 365 that we were able to formulate a working system, [an]
end-to-end solution,” said Rogers. Upon completion of construction, Essential
Energy resent drones to capture photos of the site and generate an as-built
model with ContextCapture, closing the loop by performing a post-construction
audit against the initial design.
Driving
Smart Solutions in the Energy Sector
By automating previously
manual processes, Essential Energy significantly reduced substation design
hours. The implementation of their Bentley-based IDDS has reduced project costs
for design at Brewarrina by 50%. “We now believe we have bridged the gap in
making IDDS not just financially viable for large-scale budget projects, but
[now we can] also offer the same end-to-end project benefits in a low-cost
solution,” said Turvey.
Using low-cost 3D reality
models, clash detection, and automated workflows rather than traditionally
manual methods improved quality and efficiencies, reduced rework associated
with design and construction errors, minimized travel, enhanced safety, and decreased
Essential Energy’s carbon footprint. “IDDS and reality models provide accurate
information and revolutionary viewing angles, which enable quick and safe
design decisions and allow construction crews to reduce outage times, resulting
in a resilient network,” said Rogers.
Essential Energy has
achieved numerous benefits moving to an IDDS, which has also helped position
Essential Energy to transition to a more comprehensive digital twin and adopt
new technologies. With the increasing push to lower operating costs across the
energy sector, Essential Energy is on an asset management journey to transform
their view on capital works projects and how they use technology. They aim to
integrate bidirectional data flows and real-time visualization between their IDDS
and asset management system and identify high-risk assets, driving improved
operations and maintenance processes across Australia’s energy sector. “As for
the digital future, as Essential Energy builds its data lake of reality models,
we will be able to use artificial intelligence to help identify defects in
assets and use historical data to show time lapse visual conditioning models,”
said Rogers.
Project
Summary
Organization:
Essential Energy
Solution:
Grid
Location:
Port Macquarie, Australia
Project
Objectives:
• To lower operating costs
and minimize the carbon footprint within Australia’s energy sector.
• To establish an
intelligent digital design system for small capital projects.
Project
Playbook: ContextCapture, OpenUtilities, ProjectWise
Fast
Facts
• Essential Energy explored
the feasibility of using an intelligent digital design system (IDDS) to lower
network operating costs and unlock value across small capital energy projects.
• They investigated the
substation design process at their rural Brewarrina site, digitizing previous
manual survey, design, and construction workflows.
• Bentley’s applications
provided an intelligent reality modeling-based solution to overcome challenges
related to data acquisition, compatibility, and construction drawing accuracy.
ROI
• EE’s IDDS reduced
environmental impact, lowered project design costs by 50%, and cut
design-related travel by 80%.