NextGENergy: You Can’t Have Intelligent Infrastructure Without Resilient Energy

If the world and IoT industry are going to move into the uber-connected future envisioned and predicted by the market analysts and futurists of the tech world, the first technological hurdle to be jumped is Energy.

Energy is integral to building a Smart IoT System of Systems, and the infrastructure of energy has to be intelligent and resilient enough to never go down. 

This Resilient Energy Infrastructure push has to come at the beginning of any plan for implementing Industry 4.0 at scale or any Smart City implementation. A rebuilt and renewed infrastructure system can bring with it the opportunity to renew energy infrastructure in such a way as to enable Electric Vehicles, renewable energy, better storage, localized generation, and the microgrid approach to make it all work and keep working. 

At the upcoming Intelligent Infrastructure conference taking place April 28-29 in Austin, TX, a panel brings together thought leaders: Scott Hinson, CTO at Pecan StreetDan Gregory, CEO at Available Power, and Robert Cruickshank, CTO at GRIDIoT® by RCA to discuss how communities, companies, and utilities can join forces to create Intelligent Infrastructure for Energy Resilience right now and in the future. 

The need for resilient energy infrastructure is well-understood and in no doubt among industry professionals and scientists. Many factors make it necessary to develop these technologies, including climate change, extreme weather, security risks, and growing energy needs all over the world, to name a few. 

At the MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change, a recent study titled, Toward Resilient Energy Infrastructure: Understanding the Climate Average Changes and Extreme Events in the Northeastern U.S. is looking into the likely extent of changes in regional energy demand across several factors and how this understanding is critical to the strategic planning of energy supply and infrastructure, urban infrastructure development, and resilience of energy grid companies to risk. 

The results of that study aren’t available yet, but it is likely to provide important insights and guidance into what is needed in both the short- and long-term to avoid energy shortages and outages. 

The development and employment of Resilient Energy Infrastructure is only the first step toward a smarter future, and renewable energy sources, microgrid architectures, and battery storage advancements are on that path. Without this first step, it is possible—even likely, that further growth toward scaling IoT across the globe into a System of Systems will not be possible. 

So, let’s get charged up, shall we?

Ken Briodagh

Ken Briodagh is Executive Editor of The Frontier Hub. He loves all forms of storytelling, from IoT technology to live events to content marketing strategy that creates brand loyal fans. Ken has been leading industries and brands through story for more than a decade, creating millions in value and growth. He's also founder and Chief Storyteller at Briodagh Consulting, a poet, pretend potentate, & partial alliterist. He lives in Connecticut with his family, two cats, a turtle, and a dog.

Read Previous

Smarter Factories Need Smarter Software, Sensors, and Management Platforms to Scale

Read Next

Is Distributed Edge the Catalyst for Private 5G Innovation?