4RF and the Aprisa SR - Smart Radio for Smart Radio Networks

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Transcript 4RF and the Aprisa SR - Smart Radio for Smart Radio Networks

4RF and the Aprisa SR
In this presentation:
Communications
in the distribution
network
A key requirement for
performance improvement,
enabling monitoring and control
Choosing the right
communications
technologies
Considerations and the role of
point-to-multipoint microwave
radio
Why the Aprisa SR? Enabling smarter networks
through next generation
communications
The Aprisa SR
in context
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Applications and deployments in
water and electricity utilities
© 2012 4RF Limited | Confidential
Version 1.3.0
This presentation
explains why the
Aprisa SR is the
smart monitoring
and control
communications
solution for utilities
An introduction: 4RF in brief
Company, existing products and utility credentials worldwide
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Company and products
Company:
• Established in 1998, remains privately
held
• Headquarters in New Zealand, with over
70 staff around the world
Established product:
• The Aprisa XE: point-to-point wireless
link for voice, data and IP
• Long distance: up to 155 miles / 250 km
• High capacity: up to 65 Mbit/s
• Hugely versatile: range of customers and
applications, in over 115 countries
• Blue chip customers in every
addressable industry
Aprisa SR point-to-multipoint radio launched
in 2009 for utility, oil and gas applications
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Applications and markets for the Aprisa XE
Applications include:
Remote monitoring and control, SCADA
Mobile cellular backhaul
Fixed wireless / WiMAX backhaul
Rural broadband
Telephony and DSL extension
Radio and television transmitter linkage
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Markets include:
Utilities
Oil and gas companies
Telecommunications operators
Broadcasters
Emergency and aid, military, security
Transport operators
Utility credentials
Utility customers include:
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Atco Electric (Canada)
ETB (Colombia)
Canal de Isabel II (Spain)
Iberdrola (Spain)
CE Electric (UK)
Meralco (Philippines)
CELPE, CHESF, Light (Brazil)
NamPower (Namibia)
EDF (France)
Saudi Electric Company (Saudi Arabia)
EDM (Mozambique)
Snowy Hydro (Australia)
EDP (Portugal)
SP Ausnet (Australia)
Elektro Gorenjska (Slovenia)
Hydro Tasmania (Australia)
Endesa (Spain)
TransGrid (Australia)
ENE (Angola)
Transpower (New Zealand)
Energie AG (Austria)
Union Fenosa (Spain)
Ergon Energy (Australia)
United Utilities (UK)
ESB (Ireland)
Western Power (Australia)
Eskom (RSA)
Zesco (Zambia)
© 2012 4RF Limited | Confidential
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Communications in the distribution network
A key requirement for performance improvement, enabling monitoring and control
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Monitoring and control become increasingly scarce…
Generation
Transmission
Distribution
… the further you get into the distribution network
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Supply
Distribution grid is a key area of improvement…
“Renewable energy”
“Peak shaving”
“Output measures”
Expected value
Extended
“AMI”
utility roles
Demand
response
“EU 20 20 20 goals”
“AMI”
“Secure networks”
Distribution grid
“DSM”
management
“Asset utilisation”
“Whole life cost”
“Operational efficiency”
“Self-healing grids”
“Load balancing”
AMI
Incremental capital commitment [Iberdrola, EUTC 2009]
“Smart metering”
The distribution grid is a key area where improvements can be real and substantial.
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… to keep the utility circle virtuous rather than vicious
O&M income tied to accurate
performance information.
INCOME
PERFORMANCE
OPERATIONS
Improved performance
mean increased
income: the same is
true in reverse.
“Combined, transmission and
distribution networks represent a
significant technical legacy,
mirrored in its investment
requirements: current estimates
are US $ 13 trillion worldwide
through to 2030.”
[The Electricity Economy: New
Opportunities from the Transformation of
the Electric Power Sector, August 2008]
How can performance be improved?
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Performance improvement means:
Increasing income through decreasing the quantity and
duration of faults / outages:
“OECD estimates the world
will need more than $1.8
trillion per year over the
next two decades to
upgrade infrastructure. Grid
modernisation is a major
component.”
[The Electricity Economy: New
Opportunities from the
Transformation of the Electric
Power Sector, August 2008]
• Real time / on demand status monitoring
• Early identification and isolation of faults
• Quickly remedying faults when they occur
• Rapid response to attack
And reducing the maintenance cost of the network:
• Carrying out preventative maintenance
• Reduce need for unscheduled site visits
• New infrastructure deployments targeted for best ROI
Improved visibility and control is how this is achieved.
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The path to monitoring and control
Enabled by next
generation RTUs
and move to IP
Begin to identify
and isolate faults,
with opportunity
for preventative
maintenance
+ Control
Two way real time /
on demand
information:
remedy faults and
reduce outages
+ Monitoring
“Customer as telemetry”: little
or no asset visibility and
manual fault rectification
No monitoring
However, improving monitoring and control requires improved communications and data.
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An aside on IP… where the world is moving
Next generation RTUs / IEDs are IP based:
• Widely accepted, proven, standard
• Network compatibility, interoperability
• Reliable, scalable
• Multiple applications share network resources
• Use over virtually any physical medium
“The speed of technology
change in the
telecommunications market
is high compared with utility
technology. Utilities expect
asset life of up to 40 years.
This exposes utilities to risk
of obsolescence and
associated cost of
maintaining obsolete
technologies..”
[EON, EUTC 2009]
For utilities and SCADA, IP means:
• Network interoperability between devices
• Over-the-air control of remote devices, e.g. SNMP
• Reduced infrastructure and maintenance
• Reduced requirement to visit remote sites
IP also means an open network, which contributes to security concerns for the
communications infrastructure.
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Communications are key to enable this change
“The most funded smart grid
startup companies are those
competing in the
communications space”.
[The Smart Grid in 2010: GTM
Research]
Smart grid systems employed now or planning in next five years.
[Black & Veatch and T&D World Survey, May 2010]
90.00%
80.00%
70.00%
60.00%
50.00%
“Utilities should consider
first building out their
communications for the
distribution system as that
could be implemented at
lower cost (than the
notoriously expensive AMI
deployments).”
40.00%
30.00%
20.00%
10.00%
0.00%
Fred Butler, Chairman of the
National Association of
Regulatory Utility
Commissioners
The challenge: to evaluate and select the most appropriate communications technologies.
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Choosing the right communications technologies
Considerations and the role of point-to-multipoint microwave radio
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Considerations for the communications infrastructure
Security and ownership:
• IP and increased levels of control open
networks to new vulnerabilities and threats
Opex-based options:
GPRS / LTE
Leased lines
Satellite
Financial implications:
• Whole life cost / total cost of ownership
• Reduction of maintenance time and cost
through increased reliability and efficiency
Future proof:
• Last over life of the network while
protecting huge legacy investment in RTUs
• Use infrastructure for other applications
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Capex-based options:
Fibre / cable
Private mobile radio
WiMAX networks
Spread spectrum unlicensed radio
Power line carrier
Licensed point-to-multipoint radio
Evaluating opex-based options
• GPRS / LTE: cheap, good for basic
monitoring, but can be unreliable, is not
secure, and is controlled by commercial
entity whose core business is servicing other
applications
• Leased lines: can be a good solution where
infrastructure exists, but can be expensive to
deploy and out of the utility’s control,
especially for repair, with high opex costs.
MPLS networks may cause problems for
utilities
• Satellite: reaches remote locations but huge
opex costs, suitable only when no other
solution is available
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Evaluating capex-based options
• Fibre / cable: highly reliable and secure where available,
but is overkill in distribution networks
• WiMAX / mesh networks: high density applications, but
overkill in most of the distribution network, and spectrum is
expensive
• Private mobile radio: useful where infrastructure exists, not
originally designed for data transmission, new infrastructure
is expensive
• Spread spectrum unlicensed radio: cheap, can be used for
basic monitoring, but always subject to interference, not
suitable for control
• Power line carrier: can be used for some low level
monitoring applications, not suited for most monitoring and
control applications because faults can affect the
communications
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© 2012 4RF Limited | Confidential
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Why use point-to-multipoint radio for monitoring and control?
With such a large variety of communications
options available for SCADA, when is point-tomultipoint radio the appropriate choice?
When:
• Monitoring and control must be on
demand or in real time
• Eliminating dependence on a third party to
provide and maintain communications is a
requirement
• Ensuring network security is essential
• Flexibility of communications infrastructure
is essential
• Reducing opex and minimising whole life
cost are key business drivers
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The Aprisa SR, integrated with Aprisa XE for backhaul
SCADA
server
Core LAN
Base station
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Why the Aprisa SR?
Enabling smarter networks through next generation communications
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How does the Aprisa SR enable smarter networks?
Enabling
SECURITY:
Considerations:
Aprisa SR:
Move to IP
Attacks changing
Threats maturing
Industry’s best security
Defence in depth
Not just encryption
Enabling
Whole life cost
EFFICIENCY: 20+ year cycles
Legacy equipment
Enabling the
FUTURE:
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Highly configurable
Easy to manage
Advanced routing
Reduce faults
Serial and IP
Reduce maintenance Unified comms network
Identify faults earlier Unbeatable reliability
© 2012 4RF Limited | Confidential
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A solution that makes
complete business
and financial sense
in the long term as
networks evolve
Security: an essential consideration
7%
5%
Security is no longer physical, nor
“security by obscurity”.
Open networks enable enhanced
monitoring and control, but bring
new vulnerabilities and
opportunities for attack.
It is no longer just ex-employees,
but also those who “hack for fun”
as well as terrorists and state
actors responsible for malicious
attacks.
31%
Adult / other
26%
External
Internal
52%
Accidental
4%
60%
15%
Accidental
External
Adult / other
Internal
“Security Incidents and trends in SCADA and process industries”
Eric Byres, David Leversage, Nate Kube.,2007. a = 1982-2001 b =2002-June 2008
The result: service shutdowns,
environmental concerns, direct
impact on performance.
“Hacking the Industrial Network”, 2009, Frank Dickman
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The Aprisa SR approach to security: defence in depth
The Aprisa SR brings a comprehensive approach to security:
Threat
Aprisa SR protection
Passive Eavesdropping
AES-256 encryption ensures over the air data confidentiality
Proprietary wireless framing, FEC, interleaving and compression further modify over the
air data
Active Denial-of-Service
Licensed radio spectrum and robust modulation protect against interference - either
intentional or unintentional
High performance direct conversion receiver further protects against interference
Segregated traffic flow enables node isolation, with VLAN and Layer 3 subnets and
protects against flooding
Distributed Layer 3 firewall protects remote nodes
Active man-in-the-middle
CCM-based data authentication protects data integrity (NIST special publication 800-38C)
Address filtering protects against masquerading
Management attack
Secured management interface protects configuration
SNMPv3 encrypts radio network management data over the wired Ethernet interface
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Standards-based, backwards compatible, future-proof
Investment in equipment needs to support the total
life cost needed when forming budgets.
The Aprisa SR is both backwards compatible and
future-proof:
• Supporting both legacy Serial RTUs and newer
Ethernet enabled IEDs, protecting the legacy
investment through transition over time to IPbased devices
• Integrates seamlessly into existing network
topologies, and is highly configurable to allow
the network to evolve along with increasing
monitoring and control requirements
• Standards-based and supporting all relevant
protocols, for long-term incorporation into
SCADA networks
Plan for the future, protect the past. The best of both
worlds.
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Applicable throughout distribution network communications
As more information becomes available to a
utility, having a unified communications
infrastructure makes financial and operational
The Aprisa SR has an integral mini-PCI port,
which can be used to interface with many other
communications technologies, such as WiFi,
GPRS, PLC, Zigbee, ModBus, etc.
This means that it can be used for applications
such as:
• Concentrating and backhauling meter
information to a network operations centre
• Communications for substation security
• Connecting multiple RTUs, wireless or
wired, to a single Aprisa SR unit
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[Screenshot © www.condev.com]
sense.
Example application: AMI
RS-232 / Eth
Communications
Network
Substation
Eth
Eth
RS-232
PLC
Transformer
Smart Meters
[All third party copyrights and trademarks acknowledged]
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Ease of use and management
As more infrastructure is monitored and
controlled, ease of management becomes
essential. Improved ease of use and
management directly impact operation and
maintenance costs.
With the Aprisa SR, a comprehensive, easy to
use GUI application means:
• Improved asset visibility, with pictorial
representation of all network components
• Reduced training costs
• Improved fault identification and isolation
• Accomplishing tasks quicker
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Highly reliable
Reliability is an essential component of
performance.
The Aprisa SR provides unrivalled reliability:
• Designed specifically for utility
communications
• Superior reliability track record and MTBF
that 4RF has brought to the Aprisa XE
• Straightforward design, with no moving parts
and no manual component tuning
• Operates continuously at temperature
extremes
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© 2012 4RF Limited | Confidential
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Network efficiency and configurability
More efficient communications means more efficient,
on-demand / real time monitoring and control,
informing operational decisions.
An Aprisa SR network is highly configurable and
enables set up to be optimised to match the specific
infrastructure:
• Each unit is configurable as a base station,
repeater or remote unit
• Configure as Layer 2 or Layer 3 network
depending on network size, complexity and
traffic requirements
• Optimise for any given network topology by
configuring in-depth radio parameters such as
back off time and number of retries
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Capex investment, opex minimised
Capex investment means a return on investment
over the total life cost can be achieved, although
equipment longevity remains essential.
The Aprisa SR:
• Can be incorporated into a total life cost
business model, because of its future-proof
design and architecture
• While providing superior performance and
security
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Aprisa SR in context
Applications and deployments in water and electricity utilities
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Deployment: Masterton Water Treatment Plant
Masterton Water Treatment Plant contains the Network Operations Centre for the SCADA
network. The Aprisa SR base station is located here, and all information received from
the local and remote RTUs is collected, analysed, acted upon and archived.
Aprisa SR remote units are located at siphon intake and boost pump locations.
All existing connections to the SCADA Master are serial connections, RS-232 or RS-485.
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Deployment: Marlborough Lines
Electricity utility Marlborough Lines operates
a SCADA network, with Proficy HMI/SCADA
iFix software application, monitoring and
controlling substations, distribution
transformers and pole top reclosers.
Communications methods include CDMA,
fibre, leased lines, 2.4 GHz unlicensed
radios and the Aprisa XE.
Example remote unit: Aprisa SR installed in
the weatherproof communications cubicle on
a pole.
“Setting up was simple, and the initial link was
operational and integrated into SCADA within a
couple of hours of receiving the equipment.”
[Richard Steer, Network Engineer, Marlborough Lines]
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Conclusions
How the Aprisa SR brings improved performance to the utility network
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Looking to the future
Short term: improvements in operations
through monitoring and control, with
improved asset visibility and quicker fault /
flow issue identification, isolation, fixing
and improved preventative maintenance.
INCOME
PERFORMANCE
Medium term: performance improvements
on a wider scale, increased automation
and optimising overall asset efficiency,
positively impacting budgets.
Longer term: optimised future-looking
asset planning and integration with
infrastructure-wide communications and
operations… beyond monitoring and
control for even greater performance
improvements.
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OPERATIONS
Retaining the virtuous circle
With the Aprisa SR:
• Smarter investment improves performance
• Smarter performance improves revenue income
Aprisa SR
• Which allows for further smart investment
PMP radio
Longer term business implications:
• Wider communications
• Other applications
Communications
• Smart network reality
Monitoring &
control
Information
Performance
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© 2012 4RF Limited | Confidential
Where can YOU go with the Aprisa SR?
Version 1.3.0
Thank-you…
[email protected]