In the Energy 2020 blog series, we have highlighted how macro trends around decarbonization, decentralization, consumer engagement and competition are creating significant opportunities. The industry has seen several new players entering the market to take advantage of these trends. These new entrants bring with them new business models, an increased focus on the end consumer, and new technology paradigms that are resulting in fundamental shifts in the trajectory of how energy is produced, delivered, and consumed.
In our earlier blogs, we discussed how Utilities can turn the Energy 2020 transition to their advantage and deliver powerful business outcomes. The underlying IT architecture and its agility is a key determinant of this transformation, and hence our topic for this blog.
Current state of IT architecture in Utilities
At most utility companies, the IT architecture has grown organically over many decades. While deregulation, energy transition and smart grids have necessitated changes to business and operating models, key parts of the current technology landscape at many large Utilities continue to reflect approaches derived from an architectural heritage that was appropriate before the industry started to change dramatically. For example, many companies still run their core business processes on large monolithic systems from leading enterprise product vendors, while a few continue to run on legacy mainframe platforms.
Over the past few years, Utilities CIOs have focused on cost take-out initiatives such as data center consolidation or exit. They have also increased adoption of SaaS applications for core business capabilities such as CRM, billing and customer experience by aligning to their COTS vendors’ product roadmaps, or by adopting born-on-cloud stacks. Through a combination of partnerships, acquisition of niche platform companies, or through internal innovation initiatives, many Utilities have also incubated a number of strategic capabilities to address new market opportunities and customers’ adoption of solar PV, batteries, inverters, electric vehicles and other energy solutions.
As new technologies and platforms were onboarded to the existing IT estate, CIOs of Utilities encountered many challenges, including:
Business themes influencing the future IT architecture for Utilities
We have discussed in earlier posts how changes to customer lifestyles and habits, driven by the Energy 2020 transition, offer opportunities for energy companies to innovate across value streams. The speed and business outcomes of these transformations will be greatly influenced by the agility of the underlying architecture. The IT architecture needs to be capable of supporting business strategies that will increasingly require: -
How should energy businesses shape their future IT architecture?
For starters, enterprises need to re-evaluate and assess their existing IT portfolio to simplify, rationalize and consolidate into fewer strategic platforms. Utilities should explore the adoption of emerging architectural approaches to reduce costs and deliver architectural agility. The following are examples of architecture approaches (See Figure 1) that, with appropriate contextualization, can be leveraged by energy companies as part of a broader digital strategy to deliver future-ready customer engagement capabilities.
1. Consider a platformized approach to unify all “sensing and measurement” capabilities across customer value streams
2. Consider alternative approaches for customer-facing systems and customer master data
3. Consider a ‘Calculator – Consolidator’ billing architecture
4. Deploy engineering competencies in areas of differentiation
5. Buy platforms, build insights
6. Connecting technologies as a foundation core
Figure 1: IT architecture approaches for the future
The IT architecture for the Energy 2020 company
Utilities will be under pressure to deploy flexible and cost-effective architectures in response to the forces driving the Energy 2020 transition. This will require innovative, out-of-the-box approaches to architecture that mark a paradigm shift from the past. As Utilities develop the future IT strategy to deliver the business outcomes, the approaches presented in this paper will serve as options to enrich the debate on the way forward.
We would love to hear your thoughts. Please reach out to us at info.energy2020@wipro.com.
Ravindra Balija
Head of Digital Technologies and Architecture in ENU Digital at Wipro
Ravindra has overall 25 years of IT experience and has been working with Energy and Utilities customers for the last 18 years. He currently heads the Digital Technologies and Architecture in ENU Digital at Wipro. Ravindra helps Energy and Utilities customers Application modernization leveraging public cloud platforms, serverless and cloud native architectures. He also focusses on distributed and decentralized technologies such as cloud, IoT and Blockchain to help customers with Energy Transition with focus on EV Charging Infrastructure.
He can be reached at ravindra.balija@wipro.com