This project aims to investigate the opportunities that 5G networks can offer with regards to the provision of high bandwidth wireless communication channels as well as location-based services. The project will provide an extensive overview of the current and future capabilities of wireless networks and evaluate potential use cases. Some will be developed in more detail with regards to technical and commercial aspects including a detailed business case. The highest value use cases are expected to be in the area of online asset monitoring and backhaul of system and asset data, however a detailed review will be included in the project. If successful, the project will provide the foundations for follow up projects which are expected to prepare several applications for Business as Usual rollout.
Benefits
Net benefits for consumers:
The detailed assessment of consumer benefits will be part of this research and will depend on the use cases, the chosen deployment model and the number of deployments which will deliver economies of scale. Benefits are expected in terms of health and safety, asset life extension, operational efficiencies, digitalisation, lifecycle costs and asset performance.
Benefits to energy networks:
The outputs of this research will support energy networks to choose the most appropriate communication technology which meets the requirements for a given use case rather than defaulting to traditional methods which might be more costly to roll out and install. They will also be able to benefit from new opportunities created by a more interconnected and digitised environment for delivery, commissioning, maintenance and management of assets and related processes.
Learnings
Outcomes
The energy transition will require greater telemetry, monitoring and communications to be successful. The benefits of 5G utilisation were explored in this project in support of energy system transition.
Project outcomes:
The Final Report is a detailed description of the project’s outcomes: initial research to identify where NG could use 5G, how to deploy 5G in different environments (ET/GT) and the benefits it could bring. The key outcomes from the project are summarised below:
5G is the latest generation of cellular mobile telecommunications technologies and services. Like
earlier generations it has significant performance improvements over its predecessors - ten-fold
for key performance indicators. Unlike them it incorporates features tailored to specific industry
sectors. For example, in energy networks, it can be deployed as a private network tailoring the 5G
network operational requirements to critical national infrastructure needs.
5G has been trialled extensively in electricity distribution networks, including in Sweden, China and
Ireland. UK Power Networks is doing a trial of 5G at a substation with Vodafone and the University
of Strathclyde. There is a complementary and unique opportunity to do innovative trials in the
wide-area transmission networks, not only for electricity but also for gas, to evaluate 5G’s
suitability as an enterprise platform uniting communication with management of transmission
network operations, contributing to digital transformation, productivity, and efficiency.
The core use cases explored in this report provide a strong justification for trials to validate the
benefits that 5G can offer NG in areas such as communications resilience (including using 5G as a
primary or secondary communications link), asset management, workforce management
digitalisation (including construction of a new site), and supervisory control (SCADA). Many of the
cases identified will also underpin the critical infrastructure improvements to support the net zero
strategic goals. For GT, for example, emission monitoring, e.g. of methane gas, is an important
use-case that contributes to net zero.
The most significant continuous benefit comes from workforce management digitalisation
(estimated £14.4 million annually). There could be a £10 million saving at construction sites due to
better workforce management (especially as these sites often have no wireless communications
coverage of any kind). Overall, we estimate £103million savings over five years. More savings could be
quantified if the baseline costs of different workflows and processes become available in the
future.
Based on the 5G solution design and the business benefit analysis, our recommendation is
to begin a trial programme to test, learn, and validate the proposed solutions. This
programme will provide a platform to measure the business impact of 5G on strategic elements of
the NG networks while providing the opportunity to tailor the approach before scaling. The rough
order of magnitude costs of equipment for a private 5G network is between £300,000 and £400,000 per site.
What does 5G bring to energy networks?
Like earlier generations, 5G has introduced several step changes. Increased performance (ten
times better than 4G) is one such change but the adoption of cloud computing is the most
significant. 5G has been virtualised and disaggregated into microservices that can be built into
advanced enterprise applications. It also integrates capabilities such as precision timing and
deterministic networking that makes it suitable as a platform for demanding critical infrastructure
services.
This brings with it additional security issues that must be considered in a risk assessment for a
critical national infrastructure application such as energy transmission. Many are not specific to 5G
and NG has experience already in running private cloud-based applications in virtualised
environments within NG’s critical national infrastructure data centres. 5G security is much
improved over 4G, in particular for the secure mutual authentication of devices and networks with
each other. The GSMA has provided many complementary tools for IoT devices and for
certification.
5G provides much better support for private networks. This is partly a consequence of the
“softwarisation” noted above. It is also supported in the 5G standards and by the regulator Ofcom
in its approach to spectrum licensing.
There are gaps at present. 5G does not yet have mature cellular IoT specifications and a wide
range of devices may not be on the market for four to six years. Specification of several of its
advanced capabilities are not yet complete. The integration of legacy equipment, network
technologies, and communications protocols requires further study. These gaps are no blockers to
trials though.
As part of the project a scoping exercise for opportunities to follow up with a small-scale site trial was undertaken which is summarised below:
What could be trialled as part of a follow up project?
There are four main use-case categories: communications resilience, asset management,
workforce management digitalisation (including construction of a new site), and supervisory
control (SCADA). The first is about 5G service deployment; the others are about how 5G services
can be used.
Where could the trials be done?
Deployment site types and solutions for them have been identified: the electricity substation and
the above-ground gas transmission site, linear assets, and a “mobile mobile network”, the
network-on-wheels. The integration and deployment options were analysed in depth: a site-local
implementation, (possibly a network-on-wheels) and an implementation integrated with NG’s ICT
services. Rough order of magnitude costs for the 5G components are provided.
Key opportunities to be included in future follow up work:
There are two specific examples that point towards future opportunities that were not in the scope of the project:
● Asset management - the technologies used by NG to deliver the data needed to manage assets are diverse and have been deployed as individual monitoring systems. NG wants to establish an IoT-oriented approach to asset health monitoring and collection of data from those assets for health monitoring. The software and data backhaul communications architecture could be the subject of a follow up project as part of innovation or BaU.
● Workforce management - many types of data are collected manually by field engineers, as well as samples for analysis. A 5G trial could illustrate technical strengths of 5G in managing these activities. This, however, is just part of the solution. 5G is designed to integrate with enterprise platforms to create workflows that manage the collection of data in the field and turn it into business information.
Integration of satellite networks into an overall resilient communications network - Gas transmission uses a satellite service, with DSL as a backup. 3GPP is studying the integration of “non-terrestrial networks”, (NTNs) of which satellite systems are one type. When proposals for NTNs emerge from 3GPP we recommend that we revisit our communications resilience use-cases. Alternatives to GEO constellation services will be available, such as Starlink or OneWeb, which are LEO constellations offering much higher quality of service and affordability.
Lessons Learnt
The research progressed in four phases termed: Educate (WP1), Explore (WP2), Ideate (WP3), and Define (WP4).
“Educate” focussed on explaining key features of 5G, driven mainly by the questions asked by NG in the original RfQ for the project. It was done mainly as desktop research. Much of the initial report from this phase has been carried over into the Final Report. “Explore” was a discovery phase to identify the use-cases, studied in more detail in the “Ideate” phase to develop a deeper understanding of the “as is” situation, NG’s vision for “as it could be”, and the benefits 5G would bring now and in the future. These were done through workshops and interviews, with detailed discussion on key issues with the NG team. Finally, “Define” developed proposals for 5G solutions suitable for deployment at NG’s sites. The Final Report (WP5) brought results from the earlier phases together and made Recommendations for NG to consider, including a workplan for a trial phase.
We expected to define 5G solutions to quite specific technical requirements. The discovery phase of the project indicated however that the requirement was operational in general, e.g. the issues related to replacing fixed media by wireless media, and related to digital transformation as much as needing to understand the role 5G could play.
Starting the exploration of 5G use cases (WP2) in a workshop setting was highly effective at bringing the ET and GT teams together to capture initial thoughts and helping to align on priorities. As we dived deeper into the selected use cases in the Ideate phase (WP3), the change of methodology from the initially planned workshop to a series of interviews, proved really beneficial in facilitating a more extensive investigation of ET and GT’s use cases and associated benefits. The interviews also helped us to identify new use cases and dependencies that emerged across different areas of work.
The learnings on workforce management digitalisation and potential savings benefits could support CBA development.