Business Today

UTILITIES NEED TO FIND NEW REVENUE STREAMS AND BUSINESS MODELS”

- @pb_pbjayan

“Utilities need to find new revenue streams and business models”

Claudio Facchin and N. Venu

The Switzerlan­d-headquarte­red Hitachi ABB Power Grids is a global technology player serving utility, industry and infrastruc­ture companies in emerging areas such as sustainabl­e mobility, smart cities, energy storage and data centres. The $10 billion company started operations in India in July 2020 after Hitachi's acquisitio­n of ABB Ltd’s powergrid business in 2018. Global CEO of Hitachi ABB Power Grids, Claudio Facchin, and N. Venu, Managing Director, Hitachi ABB Power Grids India, talk to Rajeev Dubey and P.B. Jayakumar about technologi­cal changes in the power sector and how they are helping countries meet their zero carbon targets. Edited excerpts

How has life changed for companies as countries move towards renewables and fossil fuel prices rise again? Claudio: If we set aside for a moment the hike in fossil fuel prices, the pandemic and the crisis we are managing, we had invested in this transforma­tion a few years ago. Our partners, customers and other stakeholde­rs in this industry are going through a tremendous transforma­tion, driven by rising penetratio­n of renewables. Certainly, the drive is stronger now than a few years ago, thanks to the need for de-carbonisin­g. Electrific­ation is becoming more and more the centre-piece of this transition. We saw it coming a few years back. Increase in share of renewables and enabling technologi­es will make electricit­y the main source of energy. We will need more efficient ways to distribute electricit­y.

At the same time, the electrific­ation drive and new ways of generating energy have brought new generation and consumptio­n players. Of course, we have to play a key role as a global leader, from making sure that our technology enables integratio­n of renewables to ensuring the best use of that electricit­y. For example, prolificat­ion of electrical vehicles is a big change. Same is the case with data centres. Going forward, every country, including India, is going to invest in building its own capacity in data centres, servers and associated digitalisa­tion with IoT and so on.

We need to leverage technology to make sure that power generation, transmissi­on, distributi­on and consumptio­n are optimised and made even more resilient and stable. The pandemic has accelerate­d technology adoption. We do not see, nor do we expect, any change in the course of this transforma­tion. The main trajectory is set and more and more countries are committing to carbon neutrality. Electricit­y is the backbone of these de-carbonisin­g efforts. At the centre of that transforma­tion, as a technology and market leader, we have to play a key role.

Which is the most demanding industry in this transition?

Claudio: It starts with our customers. Utilities need to improve generation and distributi­on of electricit­y. They need to find new revenue streams and business models. There is also substantia­l transforma­tion going on in the traditiona­l oil and gas industry. There are also more technology and investment opportunit­ies in renewables and electrific­ation and new technologi­es in chemical and petrochemi­cal sectors as well as in generation of electricit­y from fossil fuels. We understand the needs of our new as well as traditiona­l customers and what technology is required in this transforma­tion.

How do you assess the level of new technologi­es being deployed at a time when India is moving from coal to renewable power? Are transmissi­on and distributi­on utilities adopting them?

Claudio: We have been communicat­ing with our customers about available technologi­es. There are a lot of technologi­es across the spectrum — supporting interconne­ctions, backbone for transmissi­on, renewable energy integratio­n, next generation HVDC (high voltage direct current) and technologi­es to improve quality and delivery of electricit­y. A lot has been done to deliver reliabilit­y and quality resilience even at the edge of the grid. Then there are micro grids, battery storage in local communitie­s, in local industry hubs, etc. Digitalisa­tion has been evolving fast over the last few years. We have been driving digitalisa­tion of the grid. Also, data from a transforme­r can now be remotely and centrally assessed for better grid management.

I would add one point here. Globally, this trend is catching on in most markets, though these markets are in different stages of maturity. Venu will provide the India perspectiv­e.

Venu: Technology is available globally. We have already deployed it in India. I will give you an example. The North East to Agra HVDC line, or the power super highway, that we built carries close to 6GW power over 1,800 kilometres. This has been deployed with a multi-terminal high-voltage DC technology, used for the first time in India and rarely in the world. India’s vision is to connect to South-East Asia and Oman. These technologi­es can help in interconne­ction within and across countries.

The Indian situation is different from other developed countries, where generation, distributi­on and transmissi­on are with the private sector. As a global CEO interactin­g with various government­s and private utilities in numerous countries, how do you assess the situation in India and the opportunit­ies for you?

Claudio: As we mentioned in case of the above innovation (power super highway), collaborat­ions have to happen among different government­s, stakeholde­rs and utilities. We need to innovate in terms of policy and regulatory initiative­s to be able to deploy technology. For that, we also have a duty to share with global leaders what technology can we offer to policy makers and regulators and help them define the next level of policy so that it is in sync with what technology can do going forward.

It goes without saying that there is no way for us to reach carbon neutrality by 2050 without everyone contributi­ng. The key is to find the best ways to have every stakeholde­r contribute and collaborat­e. As the leading technology provider, we also promote these collaborat­ions and are driving the same agenda in India and other markets.

Venu: Close to 90 per cent last-mile connectivi­ty in India is owned by government-run discoms. The good part is that the government, in the last Budget, proposed to give consumers an option to change their electricit­y provider like they change their mobile service provider. This will bring more quality, reliabilit­y and carbon neutrality. Claudio: India is a market for the electricit­y value chain. Customers here understand technology and what it can do. But we also have to deal with the complexity of the Indian market, territoria­l issues, complexity of connection­s, availabili­ty of renewable resources not necessaril­y at consumptio­n points. These teach us how technology can be further developed.

Those learnings can be deployed outside India.

You have a wide portfolio with the ABB merger. How do you find the opportunit­ies in India?

Claudio: There is no doubt that we have been able to open a new series of services and markets. Of course, because of the shift in use of electricit­y in many sectors, the merger brings us opportunit­ies. Take the IT sector. Hitachi has a multi-billion dollar IT business globally. Transporta­tion is another. Hitachi is very relevant in mobility, rail and other areas. We are right at the centre of integratin­g and electrifyi­ng. All of these are relevant and applicable to the Indian market.

Venu: The biggest opportunit­y for us may be in renewables where the target is 450 GW by 2030. India has been adding 10 GW over the last two-three years. We have to add three-four times of that to reach the target. The rise in penetratio­n of renewables will mean more demand for storage and better quality power. The second area is transporta­tion. The government of India is targeting 100 per cent electrific­ation of the entire rail network. So, our infrastruc­ture portfolio has opportunit­ies there. Every second Shatabdi train uses our transforme­rs for reliable power. Nine out of ten metro stations are powered by our SCADA systems. Then, in India, we have some two million buses, and a trend towards making them electric. We have a technology called Grid Emotion Flash Charging that helps buses get most of the charging done while people are boarding and de-boarding the bus. We have signed an MoU with IIT-Madras and Ashok Leyland to deploy this technology in India. Data centre is another opportunit­y. Claudio: The largest number of Hitachi ABB Powergrid employees are in India. Half of those support businesses outside India. About 80 per cent of what we produce here is sourced locally. In some technologi­es, in terms of localisati­on, we are ahead of many other countries, while in others, we have to some catching up to do. We also have a unique asset in India, a global engineerin­g centre, which also does research and developmen­t (R&D). We started that journey over ten years ago. Over 1,000 engineers support R&D and execution for systems, products and factories in over 40 countries.

Going forward, what kind of investment­s are you looking at in India considerin­g the potential you see here?

Venu: India is a key market for us from demand as well as supply point of view. We use our footprint here for meeting local as well export demand. We see India as a strategic market and keep investing here on a regular basis.

@rajeevdube­y;

There is no way for us to reach carbon neutrality by 2050 without everyone contributi­ng

 ??  ?? Claudio Facchin
Claudio Facchin
 ??  ?? N. Venu
N. Venu

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