the association of electrical and medical imaging equipment manufacturers agenda welcome &...

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The Association of Electrical and Medical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers Agenda Welcome & Introductions Lunch Delegation Objectives US Policy Overview Jim Creevy, NEMA US Activities in Smart Grid Paul Molitor, NEMA Industry Perspective Ed May, Itron

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The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

AgendaWelcome & Introductions

Lunch

Delegation Objectives

US Policy Overview Jim Creevy, NEMA

US Activities in Smart Grid Paul Molitor, NEMA

Industry Perspective Ed May, Itron

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

The National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA) International Perspectives on Smart Grid

Gene Eckhart, Director of International TradePaul Molitor, Director of Smart Grid

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

About NEMATrade Association for Electrical and Medical Imaging Manufacturers Founded in 1926 Headquarters in Rosslyn, VA Field Offices in Beijing and Mexico City

~100 Professional Staff Government Services, Technical Services, Business

Information Services Medical Imaging Technology Association (MITA)

~450 Member CompaniesANSI Accredited Standards Development Organization

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

NEMA History in Standards Development

Promotes development and maintenance of product standards—domestic, regional, international

236 NEMA Standards Publications 266 American National Standards 72 Council for Harmonization of Electrotechnical Standards of

the Nations of the Americas (CANENA) harmonization projects supported by 24 Sections

28 Tri-National and 13 Bi-National standards 5 International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) Secretariats 56 IEC and 6 ISO Technical Advisory Groups (TAGs)

300+ NEMA representatives on committees of other organizations

NEC Code Making Panels, National Electric Safety Code (NESC)

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

NEMA Board of GovernorsCraig W. Ashmore, Emerson Electric Co.William J. Boehm, Connector Manufacturing Co.Theodore D. Crandall, Rockwell AutomationChristopher B. Curtis, Schneider Electric NADaryl D. Dulaney, Siemens Industry, Inc.Zia Eftekhar, Philips Professional Luminaires North AmericaJohn W. Estey, S&C Electric CompanyDavid J. FitzGibbon, ILSCO CorporationGabriel J. Garza-Herrera, Prolec, Mexico Mark J. Gliebe, Regal Beloit CorporationSusan W. Graham, Elantas, PDG, Inc.Thomas S. Gross, Eaton CorporationKirk S. Hachigian, Cooper Industries, Inc.Donald J. Hendler, Leviton Manufacturing Co., Inc.Gregory B. Kenny, General Cable

Rick Leaman, OSRAM SYLVANIAPeter McIlroy II, Robroy Industries, Inc.Vernon J. Nagel, Acuity Brands LightingMichael W. Pessina, Lutron Electronics Company, Inc.Dominic J. Pileggi, Thomas & Betts CorporationTimothy H. Powers, Hubbell IncorporatedLuis M. Ramirez, GE EnergyKenan E. Sahin, PhD, TIAX LLCEnrique O. Santacana, ABB Inc. Gregory M. Sebasky, Philips HealthcareJohn P. Selldorff, Legrand North AmericaJohn M. Stropki, Lincoln ElectricMaryrose Sylvester, GE LightingStuart W. Thorn, Southwire CompanyMalcolm Unsworth, Itron, Inc.

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

NEMA Governance StructureNEMA Board of

Governors

Div 1

INDUSTRIAL

AUTOMATION

DIVISION

Div 2

LIGHTING

SYSTEMS

DIVISION

Div 3

ELECTRONICS

DIVISION

Div 4

SECURITY

IMAGING &

COMMUNICATIONS

Div 5

BUILDING

SYSTEMS

DIVISION

Div 6

INSULATING

MATERIALS

DIVISION

Div 7

WIRE &

CABLE

DIVISION

Div 8

POWER

EQUIPMENT

DIVISION

Div 9

MEDICAL

IMAGING &

TECHNOLOGY

1CM

1EW

1IS

1MG

1PE

2BL

2EM

2LC

2LE

2LL

2SL

3DB

3DC

3MS

3SB

3SB2

3TS

5CT

5EN

5FB

5FU

5HC

LVDE

4IIC

5OS

5PP

5PR

5RN

5TC

5WD

6IM

6LD

6MW

7HW

7MO

7WC1

7WC2

7WC3

8CC

8CP

8EI1

8EI3

8TP1

8TP2

8HV

8LA

8SG

9MII

9MS

9NU

9RT

9UD

9XR

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

NEMA Product Groups

Industrial Automation Division

1CM Carbon/Manufactured Graphite

1EW Arc Welding

1IS Industrial Automation Control

1MG Motor and Generator

1MG-6 Small Machine Motor Group

1PE Power Electronics

Lighting Systems Division

2BL Ballast

2EM Emergency Lighting

2LC Lighting Controls

2LE Luminaire

2LL Lamp

2SL Solid State Lighting

Electronics Division

3DB Dry Battery

3DC Residential & Commercial Controls

Electronics Division (continued)

3SB Signaling Protection and Comm.

3SB-2 Health Care Communications

3TS Transportation Mgt. Systems

Industrial Imaging Division

4II Industrial Imaging and Comm.

Building Systems Division

5CT Cable Tray

5EN Enclosures

5FB Conduit Fittings

5FB-2 Cable Ties

5FU Fuse

5HC Health Care Facility Equipment

5HB High Performance Buildings

5LVDE Low Voltage Distr. Equipment

5OS Outlet and Switch Box

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

NEMA Product Groups

Building Systems Division (continued)

5PP Ground Fault Personnel Protect.

5PR Pin & Sleeve Plug

5RN Steel Rigid Conduit

5TC Polymer Raceway Products

5VS Low Volt. Surge Protective Devices

5WD Wiring Device

Insulating Materials Division

6IM Insulating Materials

6LD Decorative Laminate

6MW Magnet Wire

Wire and Cable Division

7HW High Performance Wire and Cable

7MO Modular Wire

7WC-1 Building Wire

7WC-2 Power & Control Cable

7WC-3 Flexible Cords

Power Equipment Division

8CC Electrical Connector

8CP Capacitor

8EI-1 Electricity Metering Group

8EI-3 Meter Mounting/Test Equipment

8TP-1 Dry Type/Specialty Transformers

8TP-2 Transformer

8HV High Voltage Insulator

8LA Surge Arrester

8SG Switchgear

Medical Imaging and Technology Alliance

9MII Medical Imaging Informatics

9MS Magnetic Resonance

9NU Nuclear

9RT Radiation Therapy

9UD Ultrasound Imaging

9XR X-Ray Imaging Products

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

What is Smart Grid?

For everywhere we look, there is work to

be done. The state of our economy calls

for action, bold and swift. And we will act,

not only to create new jobs, but to lay a

new foundation for growth. We will build

the roads and bridges, the electric grids

and digital lines that feed our commerce

and bind us together.

Inauguration Address, Jan. 20, 2009

So that's why today, I'm pleased to announce that under the Recovery Act, we are making the

largest-ever investment in a smarter, stronger, and more secure electric grid. This investment

will come in the form of 100 grants totaling $3.4 billion -- grants that will go to private

companies, utilities, cities, and other partners who have applied with plans to install smart grid

technologies in their area.

Remarks by the President on Recovery Act Funding for Smart Grid Technology, October 27, 2009

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

Origins in the U.S.

The Blackout of 1965 25 million people affected 80,000 square miles Congressional Hearings

• Cites lack of R&D in Electric Power

• Creation of Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI)

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

Origins of Smart Grid

The Blackout of 2003 55 million people affected 110,000 square miles Congressional Hearings

• Environmental Protection Act of 2005

– FERC charged with mandating reliability stds

• Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 (EISA)

– Title XIII – Smart Grid

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

Energy Independence & Security Act of 2007

1. Increase Use of Digital Controls

2. Dynamic Optimization3. Integrate Distributed

Resources4. Demand Response5. Smart Metering

6. Smart Appliances7. Storage and Peak

Shaving8. Customer Control9. Communications

Standards10. Reduce Market Barriers

SEC.1301. “It is the policy of the United States to support the

modernization of the Nation's electricity transmission and distribution

system to maintain a reliable and secure electricity infrastructure that

can meet future demand growth and to achieve each of the following,

which together characterize a Smart Grid:”

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers Energy Independence & Security

Act (EISA)Title XIII, Section 1305

Smart Grid Interoperability Framework (a) Interoperability Framework - The Director of the National Institute

of Standards and Technology shall have primary responsibility to coordinate the development of a framework that includes protocols and model standards for information management to achieve interoperability of smart grid devices and systems. Such protocols and standards shall further align policy, business, and technology approaches in a manner that would enable all electric resources, including demand-side resources, to contribute to an efficient, reliable electricity network. In developing such protocols and standards--

• (1) the Director shall seek input and cooperation from the Commission, OEDER and its Smart Grid Task Force, the Smart Grid Advisory Committee, other relevant Federal and State agencies; and

• (2) the Director shall also solicit input and cooperation from private entities interested in such protocols and standards, including but not limited to the Gridwise Architecture Council, the International Electrical and Electronics Engineers, the National Electric Reliability Organization recognized by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, and National Electrical Manufacturer's Association

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

Map of EISA Responsibilities

EISA

DOE FERC NIST States

Sec. 1302SG System Report

Sec. 1303(a)SG Advisory Committee

Sec. 1303(b)SG Task Force

Sec. 1304(a)Power Grid Digital IT

Sec. 1304(b)Regional Demos

Sec. 1304(a)Power Grid Digital IT

Sec. 1305Interop Framework

GWAC, IEEE, NEMANERC, FERC

Sec. 1305(d)Federal Jurisdiction

Sec. 1306Matching Fund Grants

Sec. 1306(d)Smart Grid Functions

Sec. 1307Qual. SG Investment

Sec. 1308Transmission Corridor

Sec. 1308Transmission Corridor

Sec. 1308Transmission Corridors

Sec. 1309Cyber Security

DHS, NRECA

Sec. 1309Cyber Security

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) Smart Grid Policy, Final

Rule (18 CFR Chapter 1) Four key grid

functionalities:• Wide Area Situational

Awareness• Demand Response• Electric Storage• Electric Transportation

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Framework and Roadmap

Release 1.0 FERC List plus:

• Advanced Metering Infrastructure

• Distribution Grid Management

• Cybersecurity• Network

Communications

Other Sources & Descriptions

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

Other Sources & Descriptions

International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC)

Standards Management Board, Strategy Group 3 (SMB-SG3) Report on Smart Grid

• Electromobility (Electric Transportation)

• Electric Storage• Smart Home• Demand Response• Advanced Metering

Infrastructure

• Distributed Energy Resources (DER)

• Substation Automation• Distribution Automation• Distribution

Management Systems• Blackout Prevention &

Event Management• High-Voltage Direct

Current (HVDC) & Flexible AC Transmission Systems (FACTS)

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

The Bottom Line…

Regardless of the source, the definition of the Smart Grid comes down to two key functions:

Two-way flow of electricity Two-way flow of communications

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

NIST Special Publication 1108

Release 1.0 January, 201025 Standards identified for implementation50 Standards designated for further review15 Priority areas identified for new standards activity Now 19

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

NIST Conceptual Model for Smart Grid

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

25 Recommended StandardsBACNET (ASHRAE

135-2008/ISO 16484-5)ANSI/NEMA C12 Suite: .1, .18,

.19, .20, .21ANSI/CEA 709 and CEA 852.1

LON Protocol SuiteDNP3IEC 608760 / TASE.2IEC 61850 SuiteIEC 61968/61970 SuitesIEEE C37.118

IEEE 1547 SuiteIEEE 1588Internet Protocol SuiteMultispeakOpen ADROPC-UA IndustrialOpen Geospatial Consortium

Geography Markup Language (GML)

Zigbee/Homeplug Smart Energy Profile 2.0

Meters

Substations

Demand Response

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

25 Recommended Standards, continuedOpen HANAEIC Guidelines version 2.0Security Profile for Advanced

Metering Infrastructure v.1.0

DHS National Cyber Security Catalog of Control Systems Security

DHS Cyber Security Procurement Language for Control Systems

IEC 62530 Parts 1-8

IEEE 1686-2007NERC CIP 002-009NIST Special Publication (SP)

800-53, NIST SP 800-82

Security

Security

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

Selected Additional StandardsANSI C12.22, .23, .24GPS & SPSHomeplug AV & Homeplug

C&CIEEE 61400-25

Communication and Control of Windpower Plants

G.HnIEEE P1901 – PLC

ISO/IEC 8824 & 12139-1IEEE 802 Family3GPP (2G, 3G, 4G Cellular)WirelessIEEE P2030

SAE J1772 Electrical Connector

SAE J2836/1-3 Use Cases for PEV Interactions

SAE J2847/1-3 Communications for PEV

W3CUS Dept. of Transportation

NTCIP 1213 – Intelligent Transportation Systems

Cyber SecurityISA SP99, ISO 27000, NIST FIPS 140-2, OASIS WS Suite

EV

Wired & Wireless

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

SGIP Priority Action Plans

Smart Meter UpgradeabilityInternet ProtocolWireless NetworkingCommon Price ModelCommon SchedulingMeter Data ProfilesCommon Semantic ModelElectric StorageDistribution ManagementDemand Response

Energy Usage InfoElectric TransportationInfo Mgmt. MappingTime SynchTrans. & Dist. ModelsPower Line Carrier CommunicationsWind Plant CommunicationsFacility Smart Grid ModelSmart Energy Profile Transition

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

Public-Private Partnership for Smart Grid

Industry Consortium Smart Grid Interoperability Panel (SGIP)

• 600+ member companies• 1,700+ individual participants• Governing Board Structure• Charter & Elected Representation• Open to International Participation

www.SGIPweb.org

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

SGIP Structure

SGIP Membership

Standing Committees &Working Groups

Governing Board SGIP Officers

Test & Certification Committee (SGTCC)

ArchitectureCommittee

(SGAC)

Coordination Functions

Cyber Security Working Group

(CSWG) Priority Action Plan Teams

PAP 2

Domain Expert Working Groups

H2G TnD B2G

I2G PEV2G BnP

SGIP Administrator

PAP 1 PAP 3

PAP 5PAP 4 PAP …

NIST

Program Mgmt Office(PMO)

Comm. Marketing Education

(CME)

Bylaws & Operating

Procedures (BOP)

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

IEC vs NIST – Object Models

IECGeneration Harmonic Control, Fluctuations,

and Renewable Integration

Power Grid Substation Automation, Power

Quality, Energy Management System, Distribution Management, Smart Meter, …

Consumer/Prosumer Smart Consumption, Smart

Homes, and Building Automation.

Communication Syntax, Semantics, and

Security

NISTGeneration Bulk Power Producers

Transmission Long-Haul

Distribution Consumer Providers

Markets Utility to Utility

Operations Power Control &

Management

Service Providers Non-Utility Services

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

Common Application Areas

Top-Down ApproachUse Cases and Architecture

ApplicationsAMIBlackout Prevention/EMSDistributed Energy ResourcesDemand ResponseDistribution AutomationDistribution Management SystemsElectromobilityElectric StorageHVDC/FACTSSmart HomeSubstation Automation

Bottom-Up ApproachStakeholder Forums

ApplicationsAMICyber & Physical SecurityDemand Response (DR)Distribution Grid ManagementElectric TransportationElectric StorageNetwork CommunicationsWide Area Situational Awareness (WASA)

IEC NIST

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

NEMA International Activities

US

NIST/ DOE

Framework &

Roadmap

75 standards

Canada

NEB, SCC

Infra. 2020

Clean Energy

Fund

Mexico

CFE, ANCE, IIE

Developing

Processes

China

SAC, SGC,

CEEIA

Developing

Processes

EU

CENELEC, IEC,

ETSI

Manifesto

Globally Harmonized Standards

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

US Dept. of CommerceSmart Grid North America Program

United States US Dept. of Commerce, Market Development Cooperator

Program (MDCP), International Trade Administration (USTDA), National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), In-country Commercial Services via US Embassy

Mexico Consejo de Armonización de Normas Electrotecnicas de las

Naciones de las Americas (CANENA), Comisión Federal de Electricidad (CFE), Asociación Nacional de Normalización y Certificación del Sector Eléctrico (ANCE), Cámara Nacional de Manufacturas Eléctricas (CANAME), Instituto de Investigaciones Eléctricas (IIE)

Canada Electro-Federation Canada, CSA International, National

Energy Board, Canadian Electricity Association, Standards Council of Canada, Canadian Manufacturers & Exporters, Natural Resources Canada, Provincial Utilities

The Association of Electrical andMedical Imaging Equipment Manufacturers

Important Links

www.nema.org/smartgridwww.nist.gov/smartgridwww.energy.gov

Questions?