The Sustainability Podcast

Grid Inertia &The Future of Renewable Energy Integration with Reactive Technologies

The Sustainability Team at ARC Advisory Group

In this episode of the Sustainability Podcast, we dive into the future of renewable energy integration with Marc Borrett, co-founder and CEO of Reactive Technologies. Discover how advanced measurement and real-time data are transforming the power grid, making it more resilient and capable of handling 100% renewable energy.

Our conversation takes a deep dive into the concept of grid inertia—a critical factor for maintaining grid stability. Inertia, which is inherently provided by traditional fossil fuel generators through their rotating mass, plays a crucial role in stabilizing the frequency of the power grid. However, as we transition to renewable energy sources like solar and wind, which lack this inherent inertia, new challenges emerge.

Marc explains how Reactive Technologies has developed groundbreaking methods to measure grid inertia in real-time, providing grid operators with unprecedented visibility into the grid's stability. This capability allows operators to maximize the use of renewable energy while ensuring that the grid remains stable and secure.

Join us as we explore the intricacies of grid inertia, the challenges of renewable
integration, and the innovative solutions that are paving the way for a sustainable energy future. Whether you're an energy professional, a sustainability enthusiast, or simply curious about the future of our power systems, this episode offers valuable insights into the cutting-edge technologies shaping our energy landscape.

 

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Jim Frazer  
Welcome, again to another episode of the sustainability Podcast. Today I'm very excited to be joined by Mark Burnett, founder and CEO of reactive technologies. Welcome, Mark, how are you today? I'm very well, Jim,

Marc Borrett  
and pleasure to be invited to join you and your listeners today. Thank you.

Jim Frazer  
Great. Um, can you tell us perhaps a little bit just to get started a little bit about yourself and how you came to this ecosystem? Yes.

Marc Borrett  
Well, my, my journey was an unconventional one, I guess. I actually started out working in the world of semiconductors, and was lucky enough to, to be involved in a UK company that I also co founded that pioneered near field communication. So if you use your phone as a contactless payment device, then that most likely has got our chip IP in it, we licensed it to most of the world's largest chip makers. And then that business was sold to Broadcom in 2010, it was a public company. And at that time, in 2010, I was very interested in a new challenge. And the energy industry appealed, there was a lot starting to happen. And I saw that there could be an opportunity to bring a different set of skills to some of the challenges that the energy sector was facing, and is still facing today. And really bringing the the skills from the world of mobile communications, you know, looking at things in greater detail, understanding signals, and amongst a lot of noise that seemed to be missing. And it's obviously a huge part of, of telecommunications and a huge part of chips. And so that seemed like a very interesting entry point, to come into a new industry from a different perspective. And, you know, it seems to have served a purpose. So we co founded reactive in 2010. We filed some initial patents around around how we could control devices right at the edge of a power grid. And so our focus was actually demand response that that was quite similar to telecoms, you know, telecoms, are gone a very similar journey. They're gone from fixed line, you know, routing, a call from one color to another through a series of physical exchanges in a quite linear way. And to move to effectively Voice over IP, and the energy sector seemed like he was going to go on a very similar journey, albeit in a very different way from quite a linear power grid with a few big generators producing high voltage electricity, and then in a linear way, bringing that down and down into homes and businesses with lower and lower safer voltages. And yet the grid was changing, you know, it was going to have to deal with rooftop solar with EVs. And so you could see, or we could see some interesting parallels, and maybe, you know, the world of mobile communications might offer up some interesting, different approaches to take. And that's

Jim Frazer  
where we got to. That's, that's fascinating. On so you saw more of a master slave network that was evolving into more peer to peer and certainly more connect connectivity. Hmm.

Marc Borrett  
Yeah, I think that's a very good rest, probably a better way of describing it than the way I did. But, but, but you know, from an engineering perspective, what was interesting is we had a we recruited coming from the semiconductor world, we recruited a number of engineers from Nokia. So, so, what was interesting for those engineers is that they had to think suddenly, very similarly, but also very differently. So, you know, in a mobile phone, power consumption is critical. So, you want to reduce the power level down to milli hertz, the power grid, we want to talk about mega mega watts, so milli watts and mega watts. And when you talk about sort of frequency of signals, then you were in the domain in the in the mobile world mobile communications world of milli Hertz. And equally, when we were looking at data rates, and you know, we're thinking more about megahertz. So there were some interesting areas which made the team has to think differently and understand the power grid, not as a power grid, but as a communications channel and how could data or how could we interrogate See that whole power system with different tools that have been available, you know, up until now. So so it was, it was also very exciting for, you know, very high end, well qualified, innovative mobile communication engineers to suddenly be presented with a whole new set of challenges, but using the tools that they're used and known very well in, but applying them in a very different way.

Jim Frazer  
That's interesting. I mean, I a number of questions come to mind that certainly coming from the mobile communications world and and having that critical eye on energy, energy, truly conservation, brings up the idea that so many devices on the grid today are what's informally called Power vampires. Yeah, yeah. All different wall warts and everything, all of those. So what insights did your did your you and your team develop, because of your unique perspective coming from the the mobile communications world?

Marc Borrett  
So we had some interesting conversations with with some grid operators to start with. So you know, having having a technical team who really just want to sort of start to explore the power system. We had some conversations initially around, well, there's a lot of assets that are not actively used in the way they could be used to help with this energy transition to suddenly be able to be brought into use to manage more and more surplus power. So the first area we looked at was immersion heaters, hot water heaters in the home, where you just have a resistive element in a in a storage tank, and that heats water up. And certainly from a European perspective, there was a disconnect, because, you know, most people leave their houses during the day. Maybe it's changed a little bit now post COVID. But most people left their houses during the day. 12 o'clock, one o'clock was peak solar. And there was very little energy consumption happening in residential homes that would coincide with that sudden peak surge of solar. So our approach to grid operators initially was, well, look, if we had a way that we could send a signal through the power system that could instruct an immersion heater to switch on at a particular time in a particular region of the country. Would that be of interest? And the resounding response was absolutely it would be, but they said, how would we do it? You know, it is incredibly difficult to, you know, cover that last mile, you know, some of these immersion heaters are in basements or in garages, you know, Wi Fi may not work so that they saw that as a challenge. And, and our approach was, well, what if we could, you know, actually send a signal through the entire power grid, that could be received at any single point on that power grid, and then it would contain in that signal a code that would give an instruction to a particular region to actually switch on rather than being in an off state consume that additional surplus solar energy, heat water, rather than just letting it go to waste. So we set up a project. And it was it was we very much felt like we were talking Blackmagic to the grid operators, because it was still quite fanciful, what we were talking about. And effectively what we what we did was we had some assets, these were load banks, so huge resistors, relatively speaking, and we would switch them on and off in a particular sequence that would create a code we had them in this is this is all in the UK, in about, well, just over 10 years ago. And and that switching on and off pattern. Because we were changing the frequency of the whole system in a tiny, tiny way with each, you know, on signal off signal. We were actually changing the power imbalance of the grid again in a minute way. So the grid operator simply couldn't see this, but we could see it because we knew where the were to look for in the noise of the power system. And because it was a code hidden in the frequency, which goes everywhere, through every transformer in the entirety of the power system, it would come out at every single socket, wherever that socket was connected on to that power system. And, and so we perform that we sent a signal that was called UK. Okay, so for four characters, not not obviously a huge amount of data. But we proved that it, it carried through the entire power system, we had received the devices in the very north of the country, at every sort of Compass Point. And it went through the entire power grid. And that was for us a world first it was working with National Grid, they saw it as a world first. But we realized it wasn't quite the prize that we could go off to, which was the interesting next step. And before

Jim Frazer  
before, that is fascinating. But a couple of questions have come to mind for me, is well, first a comment that usually we don't we think of load shedding and not enabling a load during a period of time. Yes. So that's, that's interesting about perhaps overdriving, the water heater during the day when when the power you know, is most available? The second is on I believe, I heard that you use powerline communications, of course. Um, have you developed that protocol? And that technology? Or is that? Because I know, I mean, many, many, many entities. Over the years, I've tried power line communications for utilities from, from Echelon and Domus is in aureon. And so so many others? Can you talk about that before we get into the nuts and bolts of UK? Okay.

Marc Borrett  
Yeah, of course, of course, June. So, you're right. So loadshedding is, is I think it's probably the least worst, you know, byproduct of trying to run a power system with more and more renewables, you know, you're wasting clean green power. And so really, the the objective was, which, which is still our core mission today as a company, how can we maximize the use of renewable power on the power system and you know, load shedding or curtailment? In sometimes loadshedding is done for different reasons as well, it's actually to stabilize the power grid from a sudden shock, loss of a big generator, for example, but but really, the the initial objective was, well, how can we maximize the use of that renewable energy, rather than it just be wasted? So that was the premise. And that premise, as you know, continued today is our key mission. In terms of the technology, we have evolved it and perhaps we'll go on to how we've done that, but, but it was different to what people would conventionally think about effectively, like Power line communication. So Power line communication, relies on sending a lot of data actually. So you typically have a high frequency injection signal injected on top of the 50 or 60 hertz, system frequency or carrier frequency. The problem with that technology is when you get in front of or you get your signal to one side of a transformer, or transformer has got an air gap in it. And so you're not going to get your high frequency signal to cross that air gap, that the core power system frequency does go through the through the windings or the tap changes. So either the 50 hertz over 60 hertz frequency goes through, but then you're stuck with how do you get your high frequency where you're where you've got the data, and then you need repeaters. So it becomes a very capital expensive approach, because you got to put a repeater on either side of every transformer that's in the power system. We didn't do that or didn't need to do that because we were encoding our data in the core system frequency in the 50 or 60 hertz, the down the good. The positive of that is we went through every transformer in the power system. So we get that full coverage. We don't need any of that additional hardware, those repeaters either side of transformers. The downside is You don't get the same amount of data, you just get a small amount of data. But for the use case of an immersion heater, you don't need a lot of data, you just need to say, switch on for this long if you're in this area, and that's basically, you know, you can, you can reduce that down to a very small and efficient code that you can embed within that that core frequency. But that isn't where we ended up going with the technology. We ended up going down a slightly different path, which which we felt had actually more merit to actually how you tackle the challenge of actually running a power grid on higher and higher amounts of renewables, but maintaining the system security, keeping the lights on, and still doing that at an economic cost. And that's

Jim Frazer  
fascinating, because you probably sensed my concern that powerline communications require an awful lot of capital costs, or at least in the legacy world. It did. Yeah. But this is this is fascinating. So then, what how did you start collecting this data about the health of the network?

Marc Borrett  
Well, it was it was I think, like all good innovative breakthroughs. Sometimes you don't know what you've developed until you've you've seen a problem. And the problem that we initially saw was when we sent that signal through the grid, UK, okay. We had receivers that were installed around the around this, the UK, the country. And, you know, being engineers, we know how fast an electron travels at the speed of light. And we know how small the UK is. And when our engineering team looked at the data, they found that some of the receivers took longer to get the signal through to them, or the signal had to be repeated a few times for it to then be properly received by the receiver. So we're talking, you know, tiny, tiny amounts of difference in time, but they sit still then follow, in every case, the same pattern of communication, because because were we excited, that generation of that signal to be relatively central, we would have expected all the receivers to have got the signal in pretty much all of this all at the same time. But we didn't. And that bothered our engineering team. And so we we've we really thought about why did that happen. And it was as if something was stopping something in the power grid of phenomena within the power grid was actually inhibiting our signal getting to our receiver devices. So we, we looked into it more and more, and we came across this phenomena of power grids called inertia. And the more we looked into this phenomena of inertia, which basically is the is the, I guess, quality of a power system that stops the frequency from moving too much. So if you suddenly lose a power station, if you have a high inertia, power grid, the frequency will drop, but it won't drop by that much. And it won't take it won't happen that quickly to drop. Conversely, if you have a low inertia system, and you lose a power station, the frequency can fall very fast. And it can fall at such a rate that you could risk a blackout. And when we looked at our data, we started to see that in areas where there were big, conventional fossil generators, our signal didn't get through as easily as areas where there are high amounts of renewables installed. And what that led us to understand is that this phenomena was actually stopping our signal getting through and then we realized, hang on. If we change the whole system around and put it on its head, maybe we can measure inertia of the power grid. And we discussed this with national grid in the UK. And they said, that's impossible. You can't measure inertia, we can only see it when a power station fails. And we only see that six or eight times a year. So we don't think you can measure it and you certainly can't measure it with such a tiny little signal that you're using to sort of change the frequency. So they sent us this challenge where they said well, okay, we'll we'll fund you to me issue it. But we're not going to tell you anything about the inertia on the grid. You you take the measurements you think you can take, and you give us the answers. And we will mark your homework and we'll tell you if you're close or not. So, so that that meant that we completely turned it on its head. And instead of, instead of chips, putting a code in the frequency, we were then actually sending a pulse of power into the grid. And we were starting to see, by having these receiver devices still in place around the UK, where there were stronger areas of system stability and weaker ones. And then we were we were aggregating those measurements up into a single measurement that we said was the inertia of the UK grid. And the interesting part for the grid operator was, if this does work, this is now a tool they can use to to actually measure in real time how stable the grid is, which suddenly helps them understand operationally how they can maximize the amount of renewables without starting to put the grid into a potential risky situation where if they did, you know, heaven forbid, lose a big power station, they would still have enough stored energy in the grid from this inertial characteristic to give them enough time to bring on load shedding, or fire batteries, whatever it is that they determine is going to be the right solution to correct for that problem. So we did a second project. And we provided the results. And I would say, luckily, for us, a big power station also fell over right in the middle of our measurement campaign. Because we were measuring this, this phenomena, and the grid operator had only been able to estimate it. And there was a difference between what they were estimating and what we were measuring. And it was quite a big difference. Actually, in some cases, we were measuring up to 30% more stability than the grid operator was estimating. And in some cases, we were measuring less stability than the grid operators estimating which meant that they can see two scenarios. One is, for most of the time, there's actually more stability on the grid than they are able to estimate, which means they could automatically run more renewables more safely, which is a real positive, but then there is also a period of time, roughly 20% of the time, where they are overestimating the amount of stability on the grid. And if they are doing that, and they were to suffer a large power station failure, that might put them in a very difficult system risk scenario. And, and from our measurement data, because of this risk, I said if it was lucky that we had a power station fail, because that gave it an independent data point. And what that data point showed was that their estimate was 30%, away from where the power station failure gave them the finger of inertia. And the power station failure figure was right on the button on our measurement of inertia. And that basically, I think, convinced them that hang on a second, these guys can measure inertia in real time.

Jim Frazer  
That's, that's absolutely fascinating. I have a question that in your earlier comment, you talked about propagation of that UK okay signal and that there was inertial impacts from the fossil fuel stations, not from air, but less so in areas that had more renewables. But later on, you talked about it, it sounded to me like it was you know, one, one inertial number for the entire grid is the is your do you develop an inertial attribute for the entire grid or for segments of the grid? Or is it different? Many points on the grid?

Marc Borrett  
Yeah, I mean, so So this, this is just going back to the start bringing this different skill set from mobile communications into the energy sector. Has has helped us and and and the grid operators we work for understand the power system differently. So when we first started going back to that that first UK, okay, we realized also the frequency of the power system is different in different parts of a power system, the conventional understanding up until that point was no, you know, electricity travels at the speed of light, and the frequency is the same wherever you are on the power system. Not true. Not true because we developed a highly accurate receiver device that could tell us that that that wasn't true, we had empirical data to show look, even in a power grid that's, you know, only 800 miles long, we can see it, we can instantaneously measure a different frequency level down in the south versus one in the north. And, and all of because we were capturing this measurement data in much higher precision than the kind of measurement devices that the grid operators have been using, we were able to prove that. So that was the first step. And then as you correctly pointed out, Jim, we started to see that also from an inertial perspective, and and we see that grids need all different forms, they need a national view, which gives them something in the control room to start to make those operational decisions between do we run more renewables? Or do we curtail those renewables because we're getting to an operational limit? And we actually need more stability that comes from the conventional generation, right down to regional perspectives, you know, how do we secure new levels or new forms of inertia in this particular region? Because we can see that it's weaker than these other ones? So do we invest in synchronous condensers? Or do we have a specific inertia market that's going to pay a premium for assets that can give inertia because they're located in a particular weaker part of ag grid, and we're seeing all of that start to play out now. So the thing I should maybe just share with your your listeners, is that not all electrons are created equally. And by that, I mean, if you compare an electron that's produced from a fossil fuel based power generator, to a solar or a wind farm, they are different from this inertia perspective. So when you produce an electron from a coal fired power station, you burn the coal, to heat the water, to produce steam, to then use that steam to spin these turbines that spin in the US, let's say at 60 times per second. So you have a 60 hertz power system. And those those turbines spin within the electromagnetic field that then produces the high voltage electricity, each of those turbines, and each of those big power stations are synchronously connected to one another, so they spin at the same speed at the same time. So suddenly, if one power station develops a technical fault, and suddenly all of that generation power is suddenly lost, you can speed up or rather those turbines automatically speed up so that they stabilize the power system from that sudden shock. If you then contrast that method of producing an electron to a wind farm or a solar farm, those are DC connected to the power grid, and they only change their productions output based on what's happening to the weather. Is it windier, or is it Sunny? Yes or no. So it doesn't matter what's actually happened to the power system itself, they will not change their output, other than if the weather changes. So when you bring this renewable transition into the control room, in a grid operator, you're dealing with a very, very different grid. So in when you had when you had a power system that was predominantly based on fossil generation, that was like operating a steam engine, it was big, heavy, you just have to keep keep on filling it with coal. And it would just stick on those tracks those iron tracks and it would barely move and it would run through anything. So you had a very, very stable grid. And because you had a very, very stable grid, you didn't really have to measure it. And you could use models to determine how it would behave if certain things changed. And you had plenty of time to deal with problems because it was so big and heavy and stable. But as you have more renewables on there that are basically inverter based, and you displace those big heavy fossil generation assets, your power grid doesn't behave like a steam engine anymore, it starts to behave a little bit more like a motorbike, you could stall it, you could fall off of it. So so because you have less of that stabilizing capability, and you have more of this on off on off, you know, generation that isn't doing anything to stabilize your grid, you start to feel in the control room that you're now having to control something that is less stable, and you have less time to deal with a problem when it comes along. Which means that you need to start to look at your operational margin, and that operational margin becomes how much inertia you've got on your grid, because that's the characteristic that actually determines how much time you've got to solve a problem. When it hits, when a power station goes down, is the amount of inertia or stored energy in all of those rotational turbines that buys you time, that stops the frequency falling completely vertically. And is that is that inertia storage factor of the grid that allows you to do load shedding or get batteries to respond or whatever it is you're going to use. So you inertia starts to become a critical new constraint that grids have to manage on a real time basis, never had to 1015 years ago, because the grid was like a big steam engine. Now it becomes more like a motorbike. And in some cases, in a direction of travel towards a bicycle, you have to know it, you have to keep it balanced. And it's the inertia in the grid. That is the thing that helps you do that.

Jim Frazer  
That's that's those details are fascinating. And that's, that's just tremendous insights and research. You know, earlier I led with master slave as the, as an analogy describing the the legacy power distribution systems. I often think of what's coming as, as a peer to peer network, similar to the internet for that matter, where things get routed, of course, you know, now me young least, for the path with least friction, let's say. So this is fascinating. So I think you've answered it in a number of different ways. But so what challenges do we have, you know, in moving towards a, you know, a world where we're, you know, ultimately, the majority of our power or all of our power is renewable? What are the challenges? And what do we, and what solutions are there to to get us there?

Marc Borrett  
Yeah, I mean, you know, the answer is why I'm also grateful for your, you know, kind invitation to to do this podcast, Jim, because it lets it I mean, the objective is, is how do we, how do we transition to renewables and I and unfortunately, the media, you know, pick on the things that are most easiest to explain. So I break down the the transition to a fully renewable power system in three distinct areas. So the first is you want to build more renewables. So we had cop 28, last year that said, you know, triple the amount of capacity of renewable generation between now and 2030, great, you've got to build those those renewables, but also actively phase out the fossil base generation. So that all fits together. But, you know, we know how to build solar farms. We know how to build wind farms, that's all known. And we know how to mothballed fossil generation plant all No. So then the second area is we have to connect those assets onto the grid. But again, I would argue that well known, you know, we know how to build out transmission lines, distribution lines, into connectors. Again, well known and understood technology. We have a playbook for all of those elements in those first two big areas, building and connecting renewables. The third one is the one that we're interested in that how do you operate a power system with 100% renewables because it hasn't been done before? And I like it personally. due to, it's got the same level of challenge and innovation, as I would argue, the actual original inception of an alternating current power system, we will have to re architect the entire power system to be able to run on very, very different assets that no longer provide the same amount of stability. And and I think your analogy is, is also very, very appropriate, because, you know, you've, you've talked about this sort of peer to peer, mesh network type of approach, that is definitely going to be part of that architecture. But the thing that is missing, in our view, is data. I mentioned earlier that that because the power grid has been so stable, for so long, that that the need to measure has been has been almost reduced and removed, it's changing now, obviously, but, but really, the measurement in the power grid sort of started and ended within SCADA systems, you know, you just got to report your power generation output, if you're a big generator, every 15 minutes into the control room of the grid operator. That was it. Because everything else, you know, stable, the grid was stable, that most of the energy was coming from these big generators. So as long as you looked after that side of the grid, everything else would take care of itself. But that's obviously changing. And the bit that's then missing now are these new critical operational parameters that only rise to the surface, because the fundamental physics is starting to change. And that's the domain we are trying to operate in. And because of that, we are looking at how we measure the things that haven't been measured before. And part of that is hardware, developing very, very high precision, high gain, high sampling rate measurement devices to find these, you know, very, very obscure, potentially phenomena in the grid. But those are the things that if you catch them early, they're cheaper to fix, you don't run as big a system risk, because you know about them early, and you maintain, you know, hopefully, the lowest cost operation for consumers. So, so it's that third bucket, how you actually operate a power grid, when the physics have fundamentally changed, and I believe is the challenge that the whole system is starting to start to get to grips with in all honesty, and it follows that natural, you know, sequence of events, if you haven't built the renewable assets, it's not a problem. If you've built them, we haven't connected them, it's not a problem. But if you've built them, and you've connected them, and you've got to run them, and you're not allowed to curtail them, it is a problem. And you got to find a way to solve it. So it really is opening up, I would say new levels of understanding of how the system actually operates, when which is the super exciting thing. From from our perspective, it's also exciting for our customers, you know, because we can give them visibility of things that they've not seen before. You know, we can show them. So, you know, a power station fails. You know, the way that normally happens is that is that it's a two or three week engineering task for a team of two or three, or maybe four engineers in a power grid to find out what happened which of the of the generators failed on the transmission grid? wasn't any of those. Okay, so where did it come from? Because, you know, many grids don't have visibility of the distribution network. So they have to go on this sort of, you know, quite detailed investigation to find out what happened. Why did it happen? Where did it happen, when did it happen? But you know, if you've got a network of measurement devices that are super, super accurate, super high precision, super granular, we can tell you in a couple of seconds, and we can show it to you as a video, and we can show you where it happened, which was the acid, how did it affect the grid? How did it destabilize the different regions of the grid, and you can see that almost instantly after the event has happened. And we believe it's that kind of real time insight driven data that is really crucially impact Alton for managing a power system when you won't have time to solve problems, that's the, that's the commodity you don't have any more, because your physics have changed, and you have less and less time to keep the lights on and keep the system secure.

Jim Frazer  
So So Mark, you know, earlier you said your measure you observed some phenomena. And that's a plural. Yeah. phenomenon. I was thinking, if you would have said that, well, maybe inertia was the big phenomena that you came upon. But what other things are there to measure besides inertia? Well,

Marc Borrett  
yeah, very good question, Jim. I mean, there's a lot, there's a lot, so So yes, phenomena in the plural. So you have to start to break it down a bit. So inertia is important for frequency. So really, that's in the in the preserve of transmission grids. Because in the transmission grid, that is where you have the grid operator that is maintaining that system frequency within relatively tight tolerances, to make sure that that then that linear flow of power throughout the whole power system is well controlled and contained. So frequency behaves differently based on the amount of inertia. So you go to the heart of the issue, and you understand inertia, that tells you how you can understand frequency, that tells you how you can better define the kind of response services that are going to be most effective for your grid. So again, if you think back, you know, 10 years ago, you a grid operator might have had a primary response service where they needed a gap between, you know, a power station failing, and, you know, diesel backup generation, or CCGT, switching on which was about maybe seven or eight minutes. So they needed a faster response that could hit the ground running within those first seven or eight minutes, until such time as the conventional generation could kick it. Fast forward to today, potentially a sub second. So you need more batteries. But you've got to be careful, if you have a grid that is so weak, that that you only have a sub second type of response. If you have to bigger response from batteries, those might push frequency above where your upper band of frequencies and then those batteries, saying batteries will look to reduce that frequency back down and it might undershoot the bottom end of the frequency. And then you're suddenly in a cycling scenario. And again, it's because you have mis size, the amount of frequency response of a certain type of asset to the physics of your power grid. So you need to understand and have that measurement underpinning your understanding of your power system, so you can better optimize the kind of fixer response services, you then buy a contract for. Also the investments you make a lot of people sorry, a lot of grids are looking to reinforce their transmission grids, and the distribution grids with synchronous condensers. These are very expensive items, you know, 1030 $40 million for each one. Again, if you don't know, and you haven't got empirical data to help you understand where the weaker and stronger parts of your grid are, you might put them in their stronger parts of your grid. And they may be less effective, you may have procured too many or too big. So by understanding this, this, the first principle level, the physics of your power system, you can optimize your investments much, much better make them more effective. But then if we look at the distribution grid is not we're not we don't care about inertia so much, or frequency, but we do care about voltage. And again, as you lose these big synchronous generators, you start to lose the full 10 Feed the nice heavy voltage that goes into the distribution grid that keeps the voltage strong and stable and secure. And you start to see voltage become weaker, which means that you know synchronous engines can't actually get into the right phase in the distribution grid or you start to see that distribution grids have to curtail renewable energy. Be they'd have to disconnect it because they're seeing that The voltage is becoming too weak in certain parts of the grid, because there's just now more embedded generation and the demand hasn't increased to match it. So you start to see the whole physics start to change throughout the whole power system. And again, we believe it comes back to measurement. So if you are, what if you're a distribution grid, and you want to have a real time, you know, derms, or ADMS system that will optimally provide the right response to reinforce and strengthen your grid, you want real time data to do that you don't want a model that is only updated once a year, what I attended a conference last week in in Anaheim in Los Angeles as IEEE event. And, you know, what came out of that loud and clear is that the models that grid operators have been using for so long, have not been able to keep up with the scale and the pace, and the complexity of change of all the assets that are going on to the power system. So the models are not able to replicate what is actually happening on the power system. And that's really where we believe measurement data comes in, which can not only drive better operational assets and tools for the grid operators to reinforce and stabilize and secure their grids. But they can also improve the accuracy of those models, because then there is a proper feedback loop. So again, we're looking to plug these gaps with hopefully quite, you know, insightful and critical data sets that just haven't existed up until now.

Jim Frazer  
In regards to these models, is it they are there. Are they simply not granular enough data, or is it a time a time based issue? Or is it both? Were

Marc Borrett  
both? It's both? Jim, it's both so so some of it depends on on time, you know, some of it simply might just be you know that an engineer needs to go to a substation and take some some measurements of voltage. But they, you know, you know, how many substations there are in a big distribution grid. I mean, it's, it's hard to just mobilize the people to get out there. So it might just be once or twice a year. So that's just one or one or two data points, or, you know, maybe it's a few hours, but it's one or two times a year, and are those really the most extreme scenarios to cater for. So that's why models become conservative, but also, models have to be based on, you know, almost historical experience. And we are seeing things that have not been done before, as I said, you know, running a power system system on 100%, renewables has not been done before, the only countries that are running very high renewables either heavily interconnected within larger grids. So they're insulated from other other grids that have got high amounts of inertia on them, or they have effectively renewable baseload. They have geothermal, or hydro in large quantities. When you talk about running a power grid purely on solar and wind. Nope, there is no playbook to do that. There's the tools, and we believe, you know, those tools can be applied to get there. But in terms of having an empirical, you know, long standing data set that can you know, you'd be used to create a tool or a model that can really help that that is not a given at all. And so I think it the tools are not capturing the kind of problems that the grids are now seeing. And they were that's why measurement is important to create that feedback loop into those tools. So those tools become better and more accurate. So it's got to be part of an iterative process that the measurement data underpins the tools that underpins the planning that helps the operational decision making.

Jim Frazer  
So Mark, we've covered a lot of ground today. What What recommendations do you have for grid operators for today and then moving into the future?

Marc Borrett  
Well, I don't know if I'm really qualified to make recommendations to I think you've sent me out there, Jim. But But I would say well, let me let me give you let me give you the the case study of the UK. So we've run this, this service, or this system now for national grid for it's approaching two years. We made, now we have a decent data set. So they've been able to see, based on our measurement data, I said, you know, we're measuring more capacity of inertia than than they would typically estimate. What that data shows is that we're saving on an annual basis 18 million tonnes of co2 a year, because they are no longer curtailing as much renewables as they were before. And they're no longer having to use as much fossil generation as before. So 18 million tonnes a year is about five and a half percent of total UK annual co2 emissions, which is, you know, I think that is nationally significant. And it was on the back of that case study that, you know, we were very, hugely honored to be given a cop 28 Energy Transition Changemaker award, because, you know, we can see now a national grid can now see that they, they need this real time data, to help them navigate this technically challenging course, through to using more and more renewables on their power system, but keeping the same levels of system security, the same levels of safety, and hopefully also enabling more effective cost reduction measures to filter through so consumers have lower, lower costs at the end of this and yet a cleaner and greener power system. So I would say measurement is critical. It's not to say that models don't have a roll. Of course they do. But but really now, models need that that real time feedback to improve and keep them at the forefront of planning decisions. But, but more more and more, we think in an operational context, grids need a new dashboard, they need to look through the front windscreen, and they need new dials to tell them how the power system is actually behaving at that moment in time. That can also give them visibility, like forecasting, to say, in four or five or 24 hours, you're going to need x, y and Zed. And that data is now starting to become available and the grid operators that are starting to use it are realizing that they can't see a way forward without using that data. So hopefully, that those would be the kind of, you know, collegia collegiate recommendations because we don't want to tell anyone how to run their power grid. We're not we don't have that, you know, huge responsibility. But as a company, our mission is to enable the net zero or the renewable energy transition happens. So we want to ensure that we can provide the tools to enable grid operators to do the best possible job they can, which is an incredibly challenging task. Make no mistake. So Mark,

Jim Frazer  
as we wrap up today, what what final thoughts or messages would you like to share with our audience about reactive technologies and your vision?

Marc Borrett  
Well, I would say it's a privilege to work in the industry. I enjoyed semiconductors. But I think, for me, the power industry is like the eye of the needle. So when you look at what it will take to decarbonize the world, let's say, you know, every key decarbonisation thread has to flow through the power grid if you're decarbonizing transport, if you're decarbonizing manufacturing, if you're decarbonizing heating, you know, all of those decarbonisation initiatives ultimately have to start and end with the power grid. And so it feels genuinely, like we can help and we can contribute something positively. As I said before, we're a mission led business, you know, for us. This is this is everything that we do. We are hugely excited to be working in in the States. So, again, a few weeks ago, we were able to announce that we will be measuring inertia for the state of New York, with the New York ISO working with NYSERDA and five other leading utilities in the New York State Regents. So we just can see that we can help and because the physics is the same in any power grid, the tools and the capabilities that we can bring to grid operators are going to be very, very beneficial for them. So we want to do more in the US, but also more and more worldwide. So, you know, I think it's, it's a phenomenal industry. And and when I joined it in 2010, I remember that that's the moment when apparently the smart grid was just about to happen. And I think 14 years in, we can say, yes, the smart grid is genuinely about to happen, and it genuinely feels like it. So I would say, the next, you know, 10 plus years are going to be a really, really exciting ride and hopefully a very positive. Well,

Jim Frazer  
Mark, let Lastly, if, if our if some of our audience would like to contact you, can you share some of your contact information? Well,

Marc Borrett  
that would be very kind indigene. Yes, we have a website. It's a long one, unfortunately, it's obviously WWW dot reactive, and then a hyphen or a dash technologies, which is plural, and then.com at the end, and look me up on LinkedIn, or the company on LinkedIn. And we have an email address info at reactive hyphen, technologies.com. And we would love to hear from people for sure. And there are some on the website we have, we've got some white papers, if my discussion today with you wasn't geeky enough that there's even more technical, technical gems on the website that people might want to look into to understand inertia in more detail. So we are here to help for sure. Well, thank

Jim Frazer  
you, Mark, again to our audience. today. We've talked we've had a fascinating hour with Mark Burnett, CEO and founder of reactive technologies. Mark, hopefully we'll have you back in the future. And thank you again for joining us and to our audience. We'll see you again on another episode of the sustainability podcast very soon. Thank you