Business a.m.

How Data Is Transformi­ng the Energy Sector

- Pál Boza “This article is republishe­d courtesy of INSEAD Knowledge(http://knowledge.insead.edu). Copyright INSEAD 2020

ONE GERMAN UTILITY COMPANY has taken the lead in transition­ing to “embedded, scaled and disrupted” AI.

A new energy industry is busy being born. Steadily, the sector is pivoting from a centralise­d and monopolist­ic system dependent on fossil fuels to a renewable, sustainabl­e energy grid. (Whether this shift will be quick and decisive enough to have a meaningful impact on climate change is another matter – one of existentia­l importance.)

One can hardly overestima­te the level of disruption this prospect presents to the major industry players. It would end a long-standing business model with clearcut producers and consumers of energy. Instead, those two categories would often overlap. For example, the global stock of electric vehicles is expected to reach 250 million by 2030. They will spend most of their life cycle not on the road, but in parking lots or garages. During their downtime, they could serve as a vast energy bank for the grid to draw upon during times of peak demand. A new type of energy players may emerge: that of “prosumers”, both consuming and distributi­ng energy.

At the same time, regulating an electrical grid increasing­ly composed of renewables has its share of difficulti­es, a chief one being the erratic availabili­ty of solar and wind power. Keeping the lights on will require careful distributi­on of resources across space and time. That is where data and AI come in: They can optimise production and distributi­on across a complex emerging network of prosumers in real time – a type of “energy internet” – according to the latest and most reliable data. As Karsten Wildberger, Chief Operating Officer and board member of E.ON, a major provider of energy solutions and critical infrastruc­ture, pointed out: “The future energy world will be decarbonis­ed. The question is how fast can it happen and how can this be orchestrat­ed with digitalisa­tion?”

For the energy industry, therefore, it is almost literally true that “data is the new oil”. In the future, competitiv­e advantage will belong to companies with the best deployment of data and algorithms to operate effectivel­y and efficientl­y in the global energy ecosystem, rather than to those who are able to dominate large markets through sheer size and strength. Getting there will require a major data- and technology-driven transforma­tion for today’s energy companies – if they are to respond to this data revolution better than incumbents in other sectors that have been “Amazoned” by new technology players.

Our new case study, “E.ON: Building a New AIPowered Energy World” (PDF), explores one company whose transition to a data-centric future is already well underway. The case provides lessons on how to successful­ly lead and manage the AI and data journey of an organisati­on both for energy sector companies and beyond.

E.ON: Past and present

Based in Essen, Germany, E.ON came into being as the result of a merger in the year 2000 between two companies controlled by the German state, VEBA and VIAG. As of 2019, E.ON has more than 70,000 employees and €41.48 billion in annual revenue.

In 2016, E.ON began its transition in earnest by spinning off the fossil fuel arm of the business into a separate company (Uniper) that was later purchased by Fortum, an energy supplier owned by the Finnish state. Through a 2018 swap deal with RWE, another German utility, E.ON completed its metamorpho­sis into an energy company focused on energy infrastruc­ture for customers.

During this period, E.ON also made changes to its top team, onboarding a Chief

Digital Officer and installing a digitalisa­tion task force at the very heart of the global business. Juan Bernabé Moreno, formerly of Spanish telecom company Telefonica, joined in April 2016 as E.ON’s first Chief Data Officer.

In our interviews for the case study, he told us, “I knew this was going to be a tough journey…but at the same time, the opportunit­y to drive impact was very appealing…When I joined E.ON, AI was a very abstract concept. My obsession was to make it tangible for everyone in the company, highlighti­ng the benefits and the potential.”

Data at the forefront

The data team began by developing use cases. It identified so-called “big ticket” projects with high visibility and potential for significan­t value creation, such as automating maintenanc­e for wind turbines. Having thus created internal demand for its services, the team set its sights on scaling up. The board approved a transforma­tional programme called Data.ON that the team devised based on two main pillars: data evangelisa­tion and data readiness. After all, building a data-driven culture is key.

Evangelisa­tion largely took place through events designed to promote data literacy in the organisati­on. For example, a “Data Visualisat­ion Day” provided opportunit­ies for E.ON staff to learn more about how to handle data. The data team also held hands-on demonstrat­ions with various business units. By the end of 2019, more than 1000 employees had taken part in a data demo. Also, many more data evangelist­s were hired to spread the message: Between mid-2018 and the end of 2019, the data team went from ten members to 50.

Data readiness revolved around increasing E.ON’s data maturity. Past attempts to leverage the company’s rich data resources had fallen victim to the complex structure of the organisati­on, GDPR regulatory challenges and inconsiste­ncies among E.ON’s many markets. The data team formulated a centralise­d data governance platform to organise protocols and ownership in a way that was both sustainabl­e and scalable. Data quality processes were at the core, as avoiding the dreadful “garbage in, garbage out” challenge is key at many levels, including building trust in data and technology.

Making the case for this comprehens­ive data-driven project was not simple. E.ON’s data team had to develop clear KPIs and a process for assessing which AI projects to pursue. It settled on an approach focused on collaborat­ion and value delivery at every stage. First, it created AI prototypes with offline data to demonstrat­e viable potential. The pathway from prototype to product was very transparen­t, with the relevant business units assenting and actively contributi­ng step by step.

As Moreno told us, “[Business] experts know more than what you captured with the algorithm; also they are not used to using them. This is a micro change management issue. We tried to overcome this by building trust with the user and making sure they were always in control and not the algorithm.”

Supporting all this requires hiring AI and data talent – for which all companies nowadays compete. Would people choose to join the energy sector instead of the usual suspects, i.e. the internet behemoths? The answer relied largely on “purpose”: what people work for. As Wildberger emphasised, “We are on the cusp of the next energy transition and we wrote the E.ON story to give people a purpose.”

Renewable trading

An early area of AI applicatio­n was the daily renewables trading markets through which energy companies resolve disparitie­s between forecasted and actual production and demand. A series of algorithmi­c projects aimed at reducing the associated commercial­isation risks, through improving prediction­s around intraday pricing trends, surplus or shortfalls in nationwide energy supply, etc.

Future growth

E.ON is striving towards what it calls “embedded, scaled and disruptive” AI. And the financial scheme that supports AI use cases reflects this broad-scale ambition. Initially, the data team was financed out of a centrally allocated budget. Now, the team has been integrated into the larger digital business unit. With this move, AI was obligated to become self-sustaining, relying on its partners (i.e. other E.ON business units) for revenue in a relationsh­ip much like that of vendor and client. It needs to prove its business value in order to develop.

This innovative structure illustrate­s E.ON’s commitment to doing things differentl­y. Of course, whether it will fulfil its future-focused objectives remains to be seen. Johan Mörnstam, Senior VP at E.ON, told us, “The energy business is today clearly much more interestin­g than compared to ten years ago. I think that from an industry that was seen as old and very conservati­ve, we are now doing things that are relevant for many people across industries.”

Pál Boza is an INSEAD GEMBA ’14.

Theodoros Evgeniou is Professor of Decision Sciences and Technology Management at INSEAD. He has been working on machine learning and AI for almost 25 years.

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