July 2013
Interview
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INTERVIEW
– Jim Zuber
and Ken Sinclair
Jim Zuber, Chief Test Architect, QualityLogic
Accelerate the Smart Grid
Our company mission is to accelerate the smart grid by providing the
tools to ensure and accelerate the interoperability aspects of
standardized technologies like OpenADR.
Sinclair:
Why is QualityLogic involved with
OpenADR?
Zuber:
OpenADR 2.0 is clearly a rapidly emerging open standard for automating
demand response programs worldwide. To our knowledge it is the only
standard specifically tailored to demand response programs and is
currently being adopted by Japan and Korea, as well as in California
(where it was started) and throughout the U.S. As QualityLogic became
involved in the smart grid industry, OpenADR was just emerging as an
important standard.
In late 2009, QualityLogic was very involved with the NIST Smart Grid
Interoperability Panel Test and Certification Committee
(
http://collaborate.nist.gov/twiki-sggrid/bin/view/SmartGrid/SmartGridTestingAndCertificationCommittee).
Our company mission is to accelerate the smart grid by providing the
tools to ensure and accelerate the interoperability aspects of
standardized technologies like OpenADR.
At the same time, the founders of the OpenADR standard and OpenADR
Alliance (
http://www.openadr.org/)
were just starting to create the
Alliance and the test and certification program. QualityLogic became an
early participant to assist in conceptualizing and then implementing
the test tools for the new standard. We had an idea about how our
skills in test development could be applied to the challenges of
developing world-class certification programs and were successful in
convincing the Alliance to partner with us to implement those ideas.
The key components we proposed were to develop both a certification
test suite and then package the same test suite for use by vendors as a
pre-certification test tool.
Sinclair: What is the role of QualityLogic with
OpenADR?
Zuber:
Our role is to define and develop the test tools used for both
pre-certification testing by vendors and for final certification
testing by the official OpenADR certification lab. In our role, we have
also been very involved in assisting the Alliance Technical Committee
in defining the exact technical specification for OpenADR 2.0 and the
specification for validating conformance to the standard. From that
specification (called the Protocol Implementation Conformance
Statement) we were able to develop the test specification and then the
actual test suite and test harness for OpenADR 2.0 Profile A and
Profile B.
We continue to support the Alliance and customers for the test tool and
expect to improve and enhance the test tools for OpenADR in the future
as the standard and technology mature.
Graphic:
OpenADR “A” profile is targeted at limited resource devices and simple
DR applications, while “B” profile is targeted at robust devices and
sophisticated DR applications
Sinclair:
What is included in the training
workshop?
Zuber:
Attendees of the two-day workshop will gain conceptual, detailed
technical and hands-on understanding of what OpenADR 2.0 is and how it
works. Participants will become familiar with OpenADR 2.0 technology;
Certification Profiles “a” and “b”; the formal conformance
certification program; and the pre-certification tests and tools for
these profiles and OpenADR 2.0 specifications. Workshop participants
will also learn how OpenADR 2.0 based solutions can be used to automate
typical utility DR programs. More details can be found at
http://www.qualitylogic.com/Contents/Smart-Grid/Products-Services/OpenADR-2-Workshop.aspx.
Graphic: Automated DR: An information exchange model to facilitate
communication of price and reliability signals
Sinclair:
What benefits do attendees at the
workshop get?
Zuber:
The real value for attendees is the time they save. A typical engineer
capable of developing an OpenADR product might cost a company $10,000 a
month. The course can reduce learning time by weeks and provide
insights and tips on understanding the technical specification and how
to test to ensure conformance. If we save a couple of weeks of time,
that more than covers the investment in the training. Even more
importantly for a company is time-to-market. We are seeing a great deal
of pressure to get the technology ready for certification for the
current summer season. Vendors and utilities want to get products
developed, certified and installed in time to impact peak summer loads.
That can provide a tremendous return on the investments.
For utility engineers and managers implementing DR programs,
understanding OpenADR technology accelerates their ability to
incorporate it wisely into their programs, reducing errors in design
and implementation of automated DR programs. This not only saves time
but reduces the costs of mistakes made due to misunderstanding the
technology.
Sinclair:
How many students have you taught
and how has the course been received?
Zuber:
I've trained over 60 students in a series of workshops, and we have
more sessions scheduled in July that will add 100 or more students to
the total. Whenever we do a workshop, we ask for detailed feedback to
improve future workshops. So far, 97 percent of attendees have said the
workshop met expectations and 86 percent would recommend the workshop
to others. We want 100 percent but in reality we can't meet all the
expectations that people have. I'm pretty happy with 86 percent
recommending the workshop to others.
[an error occurred while processing this directive]Sinclair:
This is the first public workshop,
correct? Why now?
Zuber:
This will actually be the second public workshop but the first we've
organized. The OpenADR community in Korea has organized a workshop and
asked me to teach it. It is scheduled for July 16-17 and will be open
to all interested parties.
There are two reasons to do an open workshop now. First, we are just
finishing the OpenADR 2.0b Profile certification tests, and this is a
major milestone for OpenADR. The certification profile is extremely
rich in terms of its feature set for implementing complex DR programs,
and the interest level is extremely high. It is also a more complex
profile and takes more study for people to understand - thus a workshop
is a great timesaver. Secondly, we've focused on training teams of five
or more at a specific company or utility. But that model does not work
well for smaller companies or utilities that can only afford the time
and budget to get one or two people trained. We've wanted to do this
for a long time and with the 'b' profile the timing seems right.
Sinclair:
Do you enjoy teaching these
workshops?
Zuber:
Absolutely. While I am intrigued with and enjoy the challenge of
learning a new technology and developing world-class test tools to help
the industry get interoperable products to market, I even more enjoy
working with the engineers and managers who are coming up to speed. It
is extremely satisfying to see a group of students gain an
understanding of a new technology with some guidance I can provide.
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