Southwest Power Pool (SPP) Partners with Hitachi to Develop Advanced AI Solution for Critical Power Transmission Reliability and Flexibility Challenges
Article content
End-to-end use of industrial AI and advanced computing infrastructure to help significantly speed up safe integration and use of additional energy sources supporting central U.S. power grids.
Article content
Initial partnership objectives are to reduce generator interconnection analysis times by 80% while facilitating more informed decision-making.
Objective to be achieved via advanced AI solutions from Hitachi, powered by NVIDIA's accelerated computing platform.
Integrated solution comprised of multiple Hitachi capabilities including an AI-based power simulation algorithm, Hitachi-iQ-accelerated calculations, augmented simulation modelling, predictive analytics, as well as design and engineering services.
Wide-ranging impacts to address imminent U.S. energy infrastructure needs by increasing planning processes' speed and efficiency; enabling SPP to better resolve energy capacity shortages, increase grid reliability, and improve emergency response capabilities.
Subsequent partnership objectives to address alternative energy integration challenges and power transmission constraints.
Article content
SANTA CLARA, Calif. & LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Hitachi, Ltd. (TSE:6501, 'Hitachi') and Southwest Power Pool, Inc. (SPP) today announced a strategic partnership to solve critical and imminent problems slowing the modernization of U.S. energy infrastructure. The partnership will produce an integrated AI-based solution that accelerates generator interconnection (GI) by reducing study analysis times by 80% while also informing faster, higher-quality decision-making by GI customers. This will markedly improve SPP's ability to facilitate the addition of its 14-state region's generating capacity to keep pace with increasing demand for electricity.
Article content
U.S. energy demands are rising by 2 to 3 percent annually *1, driven by data center growth, expanding manufacturing, and electrification. Data centers alone are projected to consume up to 12 percent *2 of U.S. electricity by 2028, versus 4.4 percent in 2023. Such trends drive an alarming supply and demand gap as generating capacity margins in the SPP footprint could decline from 24 percent in 2020 to just 5 percent in 2029 unless an intervention occurs.
Article content
That intervention starts with end-to-end technical innovation, first at the point of generator interconnection. Currently, the U.S. generates 1.28 terawatts of power *3. More than twice that generated amount waits in a queue as unusable backlog caused by today's grid interconnect process. The long wait times are due to exhaustive, time-consuming analysis and simulation studies required to ensure that new energy source introductions don't compromise existing grid reliability, stability, or performance.
Article content
To address this gap, the three organizations will combine their industry and technical expertise. The partnership draws on multiple Hitachi competencies for a complete solution: Method's design services; GlobalLogic's software engineering services; Hitachi Energy's energy portfolio management asset modeling solutions; Hitachi R&D's AI-based energy grid algorithm; and Hitachi Vantara's integrated storage and compute platform Hitachi iQ, built on NVIDIA accelerated computing, networking, and AI software.
Article content
As the regional transmission organization (RTO) framing the project, SPP will guide the integration of these technical solutions and services, leveraging its deep expertise in energy grid optimization. As a reliability coordinator prioritizing operational and customer experience improvements, SPP's input will also ensure the project outcomes align with industry-wide requirements and regulations.
'Our nation's demand for electricity has risen sharply in recent years following a long period of slow growth. Our industry has struggled to keep up with this sudden and significant shift,' said SPP President and CEO Lanny Nickell. 'There are a lot of would-be power producers out there waiting to connect to the grid, but yesterday's systems and technology haven't been sufficient to enable us to bring incremental capacity online fast enough. It's time to fix that, and SPP is proud to work with Hitachi and NVIDIA, two AI industry leaders who have the means to help realize a vision of a better energy future for our nation.'
Article content
The integrated solution is an industrial AI system differentiated by its advanced proprietary AI algorithms and high performance enabled by Hitachi iQ's enterprise AI solution stack which sit at its core. Ultimately, dynamic AI-driven technologies will be applied to various study areas, such as:
Article content
The partnership with Hitachi and NVIDIA runs parallel to other improvements underway at SPP, including a from-the-ground-up reimagining of its transmission planning processes to align them with current and future industry needs. Together, these technological and process innovations are expected to set high-water marks in the electricity industry for generator interconnection, mid- and long-term planning, long-term forecast accuracy, analysis and deployment of additional grid-enhancing technologies, and more.
Article content
'This initiative is about reimagining the electricity production and distribution process through the lens of modern AI technology,' said Frank Antonysamy, Chief Growth Officer, Hitachi Digital. 'Real-time data access is needed to create truly realistic scenarios caused by new generator introductions. The AI solution we're all developing will provide that data, among other advantages. SPP can then make significantly quicker, better-informed decisions that will increase overall ROI while better serving the nation's population with accessible power. We're proud to be a part of this important three-way collaboration addressing such a crucial problem.'
Article content
'Interconnection process acceleration is critical to meet the unprecedented demand on our grid,' said Marc Spieler, Senior Managing Director of the Global Energy Industry at NVIDIA. 'Using advanced NVIDIA accelerated computing and AI, Hitachi and SPP are helping speed interconnection studies to bring essential infrastructure online faster.'
Article content
The project's phase one milestones are expected to be completed by winter 2025/26. They include initial systems acceleration, data management processes optimization, and the introduction of AI-augmented simulation modeling among other goals.
Article content
*1: https://www.eia.gov/pressroom/releases/press564.php
*2: https://www.energy.gov/articles/doe-releases-new-report-evaluating-increase-electricity-demand-data-centers
*3: https://emp.lbl.gov/news/grid-connection-backlog-grows-30-2023-dominated-requests-solar-wind-and-energy-storage About SPP Southwest Power Pool, Inc. ( https://www.spp.org) is a regional transmission organization: a not-for-profit corporation mandated by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to ensure reliable supplies of power, adequate transmission infrastructure and competitive wholesale electricity prices on behalf of its members in 14 states. SPP ensures electric reliability across a region spanning parts of the central and western U.S., provides energy services on a contract basis to customers in both the Eastern and Western Interconnections, and is expanding its RTO and developing a day-ahead energy market in the west. The company's headquarters are in Little Rock, Arkansas.
Article content
About Hitachi, Ltd.
Article content
Article content
Article content
Contacts
Article content
Media Contacts
Article content
Article content
Heather Ailara
Article content
Article content
PR Manager
Article content
Article content
Hitachi Digital (NA and EU)
Article content
Article content
+1-973-567-6040
Article content
Article content
heather@211comms.com
Article content
Article content
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
Why are real, human TikTokers pretending to be AI?
The latest version of Google's AI tool Veo can make impressively realistic-looking 8-second videos. While this has inevitably raised concerns about people being fooled by deepfake videos, Kyle Orland from Ars Technica noticed another, more curious trend gaining steam at the same time: real content creators pretending to be AI-generated on TikTok. Today on Commotion, Orland chats with host Elamin Abdelmahmoud about what made him take notice of this trend, why human content creators might want to pretend to be AI, and what it all means for our ability to parse out the truth online. WATCH | Today's episode on YouTube (this segment begins at 17:17):


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
Threats, insults as Trump-Musk feud explodes into public view
U.S. President Donald Trump's feud with the world's richest man, Elon Musk, has exploded into public view as the two trade threats and insults on social media. Trump accused Musk of going 'crazy,' while Musk alleged Trump is 'in the Epstein files.'


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
Carney responds to U.S. aluminum and steel tariffs doubling
Ahead of a Liberal caucus meeting, Prime Minister Mark Carney said the government is in 'intensive discussions' with the United States after tariffs on steel and aluminum increased from 25 to 50 per cent.