Boston Herald

The Great American Reset, now underway, will change everything

- By LLeweLLyn King Llewellyn King is executive producer and host of “White House Chronicle” on PBS.

It is underway. It has huge momentum, and it will change everything we do — work, leisure, health care, education, use of resources — and, as a bonus, how the world sees us.

It is the Great American Reset, where things will be irreversib­ly changed. It is a seminal reset that will shape the decades to come, just as the New Deal and World War II shoved the clock forward.

The reset is being driven in part by COVID-19, but in larger part by technology and the digitizati­on of America. Technology is at the gates, no, through the gates, and it is beginning to upend the old in the way that the steam engine in its day began innovation­s that would change life completely.

Driving this overhaul of human endeavor will be the digitizati­on of everything from the kitchen broom to the electric utilities and the delivery of their vital product. Knitting them together will be communicat­ions from 5G to exclusive private networks.

President Joe Biden’s infrastruc­ture proposals could speed and smooth the innovation revolution, facilitate the digital revolution and make it fairer and more balanced. Biden’s plan will fix the legacy world of infrastruc­ture: roads, bridges, canals, ports, airports and railroads. It will beef up the movement of goods and services, supply chains and their security, even as those goods and services are changing profoundly.

But if Biden’s plan fails, the Great American Reset will still happen. It will just be less fair and more uneven — as in not providing broadband quickly to all.

Technology has an imperative, and there is so much technology coming to market that the market will embrace it, nonetheles­s.

Think driverless cars, but also think telemedici­ne, carbon capture and utilizatio­n, aerial taxis, drone deliveries and 3D-printed body parts. Add new materials like graphene and nanomanufa­cturing, and an awesome future awaits.

We have seen just the tip of digitizati­on and have been reminded of how pervasive it is by the current chip shortage, which is slowing automobile production lines and thousands of manufactur­es. The future belongs to chips and sensors: small soldiers in mighty armies.

Accompanyi­ng digitizati­on is electrific­ation. Our cars, trucks, trains and even aircraft and ships are headed that way.

Central to the future — to the smart city, the smart railroad, the smart highway and the smart airport — is the electric supply.

The whole reset future of digitizati­on and sensor-facilitate­d mobility depends on electricit­y — and not just the availabili­ty of electricit­y going forward, but also the resilience of supply. It also needs to be carbonfree and have low environmen­tal impact.

An overhaul of the electric industry’s infrastruc­ture, increasing its resilience, is an imperative underpinni­ng the reset.

The Texas blackouts were a brutal wake-up call. Job one is to look into hardening the entire electric supply system from informatio­nal technology to operationa­l technology, from storm resistance to solar flare resistance, from catastroph­ic physical failure to failure induced by hostile players.

The electric grid needs survivabil­ity, but so do the data flows that will dominate the virtual utility of the future. It also needs a failsafe ability to isolate trouble in nanosecond­s and, essentiall­y, break itself into less vulnerable, defensive minigrids.

Securing the grid is akin to national security. Indeed, it is national security.

Electricit­y is the one indispensa­ble in the future: the future of the great reset.

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