EPIC Was an Epic Success

NETA World StaffWinter 2024 EPIC

NETA’s inaugural Electrical Power Innovations Conference (EPIC) kicked off on October 13, 2024, in Dallas, Texas. Billed as an industry-leading educational conference, EPIC brought industry experts and thought leaders together to share knowledge and discuss the emerging technologies and trends that will shape tomorrow’s electrical power industry. By all accounts, it was an EPIC success!

Kristy Swagheimer, Redbrick Insights

If you were not there, you missed a different kind of conference. The EPIC experience was invigorating, engaging, and enlightening. EPIC participants gathered after each knowledge-sharing session to engage the session’s thought leaders and hang in the hallways with voices raised and energized in discussion. These conversations were the catalyst for actions that will be leveraged as EPIC participants return to lead their organizations forward. 

Ron Widup, Shermco Industries

The success of EPIC rests squarely on the 68 companies that sent speakers and teams of representatives to participate in the conference’s 12 unique future-focused knowledge-sharing sessions. EPIC participants aimed to keep up with or stay ahead of the technological advancements and trends shaping the electrical power industry. NETA is grateful to the companies that invested in sending more than 30 subject-matter experts and thought leaders who shaped the topics and led the discussions. 

THOUGHT LEADERSHIP SESSIONS

EPIC Thought Leadership Sessions focused on four main themes: 

  • Emerging Technologies
  • Renewable Energy, Powering the Grid
  • Powering EV and IoT
  • Workforce Development 

Participants were there to gain insight and understand what is on the horizon of the rapidly evolving electrical power industry and which technologies and developments will impact their businesses, shift their services, and drive training. Three keynote addresses, one for each day of the conference, initiated inquiry. Each future-focused knowledge-sharing session and the discussions that followed covered a different topic. Session thought leaders and attendees deliberated back and forth, traversing subjects that engaged new and old ideas and challenged existing thinking.

Karla Flanagan, TSTC

What is certain is that the adoption of new technology will be mixed, as it always has been in the power industry. For example, thousands of electromechanical relays, now 40 to 50 years old, are still in service protecting power systems across the United States despite several technological upgrades over the last two decades. 

The New Workforce

Looking forward, the span of knowledge required to manage and maintain electrical power systems is poised to explode as automation, digitization, and AI are integrated into existing systems. This places a formidable logistical burden on the system owners, designers, and technicians who lead their companies and customers in caring for the health and life extension of electrical apparatuses. How will our industry ensure that the keepers of power reliability and safety know what they need to know?  How do we train older technicians on the new technologies? How do we train new technicians on the old?  

Keon McEwen, Black & Veatch, Delivers the Sunday Keynote Address on Cybersecurity

The knowledge-sharing sessions on Workforce Development and Management were among the most well-attended. Session thought leaders provided important perspectives on the power industry’s generational melting pot and offered strategies for leveraging each generation’s unique strengths and knowledge to build a stronger and more knowledgeable workforce. 

Mark Lauby, NERC

Representatives from Texas State Technical College and the U.S. Department of Labor presented apprenticeship models and case studies advocating for academic and corporate collaboration as an important path to building the power workforce. Apprenticeship and co-op programs were offered as a proven approach to leading an educational revolution and driving power-career growth. 

Mark Marano, SI Solutions, Delivers the Monday Keynote Address on the State of the Industry

Redbrick Insights and Gen Z @ Work provided perspectives on generational integration and leveraging mentoring programs up and down the age continuum.  

Emerging Techology

Siemens, Eaton, GE, Doble Engineering, and Megger delivered session presentations on market factors driving new product research and development. They shared details on new and emerging technologies, substation automation, and equipment digitization that will impact system design, power reliability, and infrastructure health management. TRC explained how analytical tools can significantly improve operational quality and safety. Group CBS offered perspectives on life extension strategies needed to maintain systems until new technology can be universally implemented. 

Chris Kuehl, ARMADA, Delivers the Tuesday Keynote Address on the Economic Outlook
Renewable Energy

The renewable energy sector and its capacity to support growing power demand was a topic of great interest. The U.S. Department of Energy, NERC, the American Clean Power Association, and Cargill each provided differing perspectives on the state of the renewable sector and implications for the near and distant future.

Information Techology, Operational Technology, and Artificial Intelligence

Session discussions also focused on the impact of IT, OT, and AI on power system management and technician knowledge demand. Traditionally, field technicians have not been trained in IT and OT network operations. With the digitization of substations and power infrastructure and the growth of industrial IoT, these processes are overlapping within the electrical power industry. Smart equipment, monitoring devices, and sensor technology advancements are becoming more common in the electrical distribution network. This connectivity creates new opportunities to improve operational efficiency, detect problems before they occur, prioritize maintenance, and proactively manage the health of the system. Field technicians will need to understand these applications and know how to inspect and test the digital components as part of the system evaluation and testing process. This expanded scope of knowledge will need to be built into the training programs for technicians at all levels. 

These are just a few of the engaging topics EPIC participants explored, provoking novel thinking, raising new questions, and sparking solution-seeking ideation. So if you missed EPIC 2024, be sure to plan on attending the next EPIC event. If you want to learn more about the EPIC 2024 discussions, visit EPICpower.org for session summaries and topic overviews that will be released over the coming months. 

WHAT ATTENDEES SAID ABOUT EPIC

“We had a great start to the week at the NETA EPIC conference discussing the latest technologies and where the power industry is headed. It was great to share ideas with the industry’s best thought leaders.
Brian Rogers and John Lyons, AMP Quality Energy Services

“Attending the first-ever NETA Electric Power Innovations Conference (EPIC) was an engaging experience. I was pleased to participate as a speaker in the workforce-focused sessions, discussing how workforce development and electrical testing certifications are critical to the reliable deployment of clean energy for energy transformation.
Josh Rogers, Sr. Director of Workforce Safety, Training, and Operations, American Clean Power Association

“It was a pleasure participating in NETA’s first EPIC event. It was a great opportunity for Doble to engage with the attendees and share new trends impacting the power industry.
Jose Ruiz, Principal Technical Application Engineer, Doble Engineering, Doble Engineering Company

“I appreciated the opportunity to share an overview of the state of the electrical power industry, looking at the history of recent power generation innovations and how they may impact the evolution of future innovations.
Mark Marano, President and CEO, SI Solutions

“I think EPIC will help bridge the gap between IT and OT professionals.
Keon McEwen, Black & Veatch

NETA companies are operation technology. To stay relevant, we must embrace information technology.
David Huffman, Power Systems Testing Company