Chris Kardos – Director of Product Strategy Ecologic Analytics, Bloomington, MN, USA How Smart Grid Standards are Shaping the Future
An MDMS Perspective
March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA Speaker and Company Background
• Chris Kardos, Director of Product Strategy • Ecologic Analytics was founded in 2000 and it’s headquartered in Bloomington, MN. • Today, we employ more than 50 people in product development, product testing, customer support and sales and marketing. • The founders of Ecologic Analytics were among the first to identify the need for the solution that would become the meter data management solution. • Ecologic Analytics is privately held with a minority investment received from Landis+Gyr in December 2007.
March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA Our Customers We currently have over 14.5-million endpoints in production through our collaboration with some of the most intelligent utilities* in North America.
*IDC Energy Insights’2009 UtiliQ Top 25 Ranking
March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA MDMS Relationship to Smart Grid
March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA Smart Grid Standards Landscape
IEC 61970/61968 for Enterprise “IT” Integration
IEC 61850 for Real-Time Field Automation, DER, and Dynamic Customer Integration
IEEE/IEC P37.118/61850 For Phasor Measurement Units SAE/61850 For PHEVs ISA for Industrial ANSI C12/IEC Revenue Metering ASHRAE/ANSI 135 for Building Automation
March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA AMI and Smart Grid System Architecture
Smart Meters & Field Area Wide Area Data Collection MDM System Existing Utility Third Parties Other Devices Networks Networks Systems Systems
CSR Power Line CIS Energy Service PLC/BPL PSTN Data Provider Collection Data Exchange
Retailer BPL Asset Mgmt Wireless Data AMI Management Collection Systems
Mesh RF Web Regulators and Satellite Presentation Paging Agencies Data Internet Collection OMS Private Usage Data Wireless Repository (WiMAX) Customer WMS Telephone Data Public Wireless Collection Star RF (Paging, GPRS, 1XRTT) GIS/DPS
March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA The Role of the MDMS
•• AA commoncommon integrationintegration pointpoint forfor disparatedisparate AMIAMI andand backback officeoffice systemssystems •• AA commoncommon repositoryrepository forfor storage,storage, validation,validation, andand disseminationdissemination ofof meteringmetering andand relatedrelated datadata •• AA commoncommon integrationintegration pointpoint forfor commandcommand andand controlcontrol functionsfunctions relatedrelated toto metersmeters andand premise-basedpremise-based devicesdevices •• AA commoncommon engineengine thatthat enablesenables advancedadvanced functionsfunctions andand analyticsanalytics forfor thethe smartsmart gridgrid
March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA Standards and Related Organizations
Federal SmartGrid Task Force Intelligent Grid Coordination Committee
March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA Key Smart Grid Standard Identified by NIST
Standard Application MDMS Impact
AMI-SEC System Security AMI & SG End-to-End Security High
ANSI C12.19/MC 1219 Revenue Metering Info. Model Low
BACnet ANSI ASHRAE 135-2008/ISO 16484-5 Building Automation Low
DNP3 Substation & Feeder Device Automation Low
IEC 60870-6/TASE.2 Inter-Control Center Comm. Low
IEC 61850 Substation Automation & Protection Medium
IEC 61968/61970 App. Level Energy Mgmt. System Interfaces High
IEC 62351 Parts 1-8 Info. Security for Power System Control Ops. Medium
IEEE C37.118 Phasor Measurement Unit Comms. Low
IEEE 1547 Phys. & Elec. Interconnect. between Utility and Dist. Gen. Low IEEE 1686-2007 Security for IEDs Low
NERC CIP 002-009 Cyber Security for Bulk Power Systems High
NIST SP800-53, NIST SP 800-82 Cyber Sec. Standards & Guidelines for Federal Info. Low Systems Open Automated Demand Response Price Responsive & Direct Load Control High OpenHAN HAN Device Comm., Measurement & Control High
March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA Primary Standards for MDMS
• IEC 61968 – Common Information Model (Part 11) – Meter Reading Control (Part 9) – Home Area Networks (Part 9 - future) – Distribution Operations (Part 3) • OpenHAN and ZigBee / HomePlug (Smart Energy Profile) • Open Automated Demand Response • NERC CIP 002-009 • AMI-SEC • DRAFT NISTIR 7628 - Smart Grid Cyber Security Strategy and Requirements
March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA NERC – Critical Infrastructure Protection Standards
002 – Critical Cyber Asset Identification 003 – Security Management Controls 004 – Personnel and Training 005 – Electronic Security Perimeters 006 – Physical Security of Critical Cyber Assets 007 – Systems Security Management 008 – Incident Reporting and Response Planning 009 – Recovery Plans for Critical Cyber Assets
March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA Primary Security Services (AMI-SEC)
• Confidentiality and Privacy • Integrity • Availability • Identification • Authentication • Authorization • Non-Repudiation • Accounting
March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA Supporting Security Services (AMI-SEC)
• Anomaly Detection Services • Boundary Services • Cryptographic Services • Notification and Signaling Services • Resource Management Services • Trust and Certificate Services
March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA Achieving Smart Grid Goals
Interoperability
Security
Standards
March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA Benefits of Standards The number of technologies that come into a Smart Grid project can be staggering. Standards enable end-to-end interoperability and security while: – Lowering the cost of integration – Increasing the speed of implementation – Reducing project risk – Isolating the impacts of technology changes
March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA Thank You Chris Kardos Director of Product Strategy [email protected] (952) 843-6051
March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA