ICONICS > Case Studies > Customer Success Story: Fort Collins Utilities

Customer Success Story: Fort Collins Utilities

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Company Size
1,000+
Region
  • America
Country
  • United States
Product
  • ICONICS GENESIS32™ OPC Web-enabled HMI/SCADA suite
Tech Stack
  • OPC communications standards
  • ODBC connectivity
Implementation Scale
  • Enterprise-wide Deployment
Impact Metrics
  • Cost Savings
  • Productivity Improvements
Technology Category
  • Application Infrastructure & Middleware - API Integration & Management
Applicable Industries
  • Utilities
Applicable Functions
  • Maintenance
Use Cases
  • Process Control & Optimization
Services
  • System Integration
About The Customer
Fort Collins, Colorado, located 60 miles north of Denver, is a town of approximately 130,000 residents and is home to Colorado State University. Money magazine named the town the “Best Place to Live” in 2006. The town’s electric utility currently serves over 65,000 customers over a 22 square mile service territory. Its five substations have a combined transformer capacity of 600 MVA.
The Challenge
Fort Collins Light & Power had a number of specific goals in mind before upgrading its SCADA system. The SCADA software itself needed to support five substations and 2,600 data and control points using OPC communications standards. The HMI would need to interface with multiple applications including system power quality and security, to name a few. Fort Collins also planned to establish a dedicated GIG Ethernet fiber loop to each of its substations, as well as to the utility’s Drake Water Reclamation Facility, to provide a high-speed secure data highway for SCADA and future applications such as distribution automation. The utility also planned upgrades to all substation remote terminal units (RTUs) and power quality meters (involving both hardware and software).
The Solution
Fort Collins Light & Power utilizes ICONICS’ GENESIS32 HMI/SCADA suite to enforce a manual load shedding requirement, allowing the utility to select feeders rather than the G&T utility tripping substation transformers. The new system is also used in proactive power quality event/system disturbance notification via paging or other system alarms. Substation data, controls, security alarms, reference materials and cameras were all incorporated into the single HMI/SCADA solution. Ethernet communications were established to all substation devices via TCP/IP, thereby eliminating outdated modem technology, and all SCADA and fiber equipment were connected to uninterruptible power supplies.
Operational Impact
  • An HMI solution that can handle multiple uses
  • Standard industry OPC architecture, which allows for vendor independent alarm servers, trending, data historians and HMIs
  • Flexibility to communicate via multiple protocols using OPC servers
  • Capability to easily add functionality
  • Scalability from small to large point counts

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