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Chris Kardos – Director of Product Strategy Ecologic Analytics, Bloomington, MN, USA

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Chris Kardos – Director of Product Strategy Ecologic Analytics, Bloomington, MN, USA

March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA

How Smart Grid Standards are

Shaping the Future

An MDMS Perspective

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

March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA

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

ASHRAE/ANSI 135 for Building

Automation

ISA for Industrial

ANSI C12/IEC Revenue

Metering

SAE/61850 For

PHEVs

Smart Grid Standards Landscape

AMI Management

Systems

Wireless

Data

Collection

Paging

Data

Collection

CIS

OMS

WMS

GIS/DPS

Wide Area

Networks

Field Area

NetworksData Collection

SystemsExisting Utility

Systems

Web

PresentationRegulators and

AgenciesInternet

Public Wireless

(Paging,

GPRS, 1XRTT)

Telephone

Data

Collection

Smart Meters &

Other Devices

Power Line

Data

Collection

Usage Data

Repository

Private

Wireless

(WiMAX)

Asset Mgmt

MDM System

Energy Service

Provider

CSR

Third Parties

Retailer

Data

Exchange

Satellite

BPL

Customer

PSTNPLC/BPL

Mesh RF

Star RF

AMI and Smart Grid System Architecture

March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA

The Role of the MDMS

• A common integration point

for disparate AMI and back

office systems

• A common repository for

storage, validation, and

dissemination of metering and

related data

• A common integration point

for command and control

functions related to meters

and premise-based devices

• A common engine that enables

advanced functions and

analytics for the smart grid

• A common integration point

for disparate AMI and back

office systems

• A common repository for

storage, validation, and

dissemination of metering and

related data

• A common integration point

for command and control

functions related to meters

and premise-based devices

• A common engine that enables

advanced functions and

analytics for the smart grid

March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA

March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA

Intelligent Grid Coordination CommitteeFederal SmartGrid Task Force

Standards and Related Organizations

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.

Systems

Low

Open Automated Demand Response Price Responsive & Direct Load Control High

OpenHAN HAN Device Comm., Measurement & Control High

Key Smart Grid Standard Identified by NIST

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

March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA

Achieving Smart Grid Goals

Standards

Interoperability

Security

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 KardosDirector of Product Strategy

[email protected]

(952) 843-6051

March 7 – 10, 2010 San Diego, CA, USA