| NSTAR teams up with GE Energy to reduce power outages and restore service faster | |
| October 27, 2009 | |
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The U.S. Department of Energy today awarded NSTAR Electric $10 million in federal stimulus funding to advance the roll-out of the company’s electric grid “self-healing” project.
By utilizing GE’s smart grid technologies, NSTAR will further-improve service reliability by reducing the extent, frequency and duration of customer outages. NSTAR already has one of the largest automated systems in the country and this project will serve to modernize more of the grid in its service territory. “These stimulus dollars from the Department of Energy provide us with the opportunity to build upon NSTAR’s previous Smart Grid investments so we can continue to deliver increasingly reliable service to our customers,” said Tom May, NSTAR Chairman, President and CEO. “We’ve demonstrated this technology works, and now we’re ready for a larger scale deployment to help build the electric grid of the future.” Today, utilities often have to rely on customer phone calls to learn of power outages, and then must send work crews to the site to restore power. With a smarter grid, NSTAR can automatically isolate the outage, reroute power around the outage, and even correct some outages without ever having to deploy a truck or crew. Customers will have fewer and shorter outages. The system combines detection, assessment, decision support and network control to automatically reroute power around outages – limiting the households affected to those closest to the damaged equipment. “While there is nothing we can do to control the weather, we can certainly take control of how we deal with its effects,” said Bob Gilligan, vice president of GE Energy’s transmission and distribution business. “GE’s smart grid solutions will help manage and control NSTAR’s system to maintain and restore more power to more people – even while a storm is still going strong. That’s the revolutionary level of service improvements smart grid can deliver.” Customers whose power can’t be restored remotely can still see shorter outage times, as the system analyzes the outage causes and immediately dispatches the best resources to fix the problem. NSTAR customers can learn more about how smart grid technology works by watching the video available at: http://www.itsyoursmartgrid.com/solutions/minimizing_impact.html About NSTAR About GE Energy
About GE For more information about GE Energy, contact: |
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Allison Eckelkamp GE Energy 678-844-6849 allison.eckelkamp@ge.com | Gina DeRossi or Howard Masto Masto Public Relations 518-786-6488 gina.derossi@mastopr.com howard.masto@ge.com |