Amid a cost-of-living crisis and the shift from fossil fuels to low-carbon alternatives, power and utilities face a seismic shift. According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), the world is on course to add more renewable capacity in the next five years than has been installed since the first commercial renewable energy power plant was built more than 100 years ago.1 This transition, characterised by a departure from traditional reliance on large, dependable plants to a landscape marked by numerous renewable energy units, brings new challenges. These include intermittent output, system instability, reliability concerns and the escalating impact of climate change-induced events like floods, storms and wildfires. We expect that digital transformation, specifically emerging technologies like AI, will be essential for technology officers to navigate these complexities.
This transformation presents challenges, compounded by increasing demand from customers seeking reliable, always-on essential services that lower their greenhouse gas emissions. Some consumers have taken matters into their own hands, engaging in self-generation and storage. Meanwhile, natural gas networks are grappling with how to decarbonise their networks and what emissions reduction targets mean for their businesses.