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Addressing Metering Infrastructure with LoRaWAN

2022-09-13
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Illustration: © IoT For All

In the U.S., a water main breaks every two minutes, leaking enough water each day to fill 9,000 swimming pools, according to recent ASCE data. As critical infrastructure continues to age like it has in the water industry, utilities and municipalities must find practical solutions to rebuild and augment these systems with modern materials and technologies. In fact, the renewal and replacement of aging water and wastewater infrastructure has been the top challenge facing water utilities in the United States for the last seven years, according to the American Water Works Association (AWWA) State of the Water Industry Report. An example of innovation directly addressing today’s aging water infrastructure is the use of Low Power Wide Area Networks (LPWANs) such as LoRaWAN and low-cost sensors to support new advanced metering infrastructure (AMI).

AMI is often narrowly viewed as a one-for-one replacement of legacy Automatic Meter Reading (AMR) and read-to-bill processes that require drive by or manual meter reading to determine water consumption. Deploying advanced metering infrastructure with LPWAN connectivity, however, not only fully automates meter reading but expands the ability for utilities and municipalities to implement a variety of water management applications that address broader water conservation and sustainability concerns.

'The adoption of LoRaWAN by water utilities for metering and improved service delivery is providing gas and electric utilities with foundational information for the development of new infrastructure monitoring and safety applications.' -SenetClick To Tweet

Why LoRaWAN?

When evaluating an AMI solution, utility providers must determine the most appropriate communication standard and network consumption model for their connected device environment. This choice directly impacts the near- and long-term operational flexibility and cost savings that utilities can realize. It also has the potential to create new models of engagement between utilities and municipal organizations as well as cross-sector utility collaboration.

Because metering and infrastructure monitoring applications have relatively low data payloads and seldom require low latency, the legacy water management market is being disrupted by solutions built on the LoRaWAN standard. LoRaWAN Network-as-a-Service (NaaS) delivery models and LoRaWAN sensor-enabled end-devices have proven to be viable replacements for legacy closed and proprietary systems that are costly to operate and lack the roadmap to support the broader set of conservation and sustainability initiatives being prioritized today.

By adopting public managed LoRaWAN network services for advanced metering infrastructure, designed from the ground up and with the capacity to support millions of connected devices, utilities and municipalities can now efficiently and cost effectively implement their digital transformation initiatives.

Automating and Augmenting Water AMI

LoRaWAN networks designed for advanced metering infrastructure are among the most capable. They are high-density, built with abundant capacity, and secure. A single LoRaWAN gateway can support several hundred-thousand endpoints, representing a small fraction of the total network capacity. Additionally, the LoRaWAN protocol was built with security as a fundamental part of the network architecture, meaning it is highly capable of handling the requirements for secure wireless delivery of utility and municipal data. Additional layers of security such as MTE (MicroToken Exchange) and MKE (Managed Key Encryption) are also supported by forward thinking network operators to support critical infrastructure and essential business applications.

With advancements in automated metering and wireless data collection sensors, water utilities can now utilize their advanced metering infrastructure to reduce water loss through leak detection, streamline billing through enhanced water flow monitoring, and implement new rate structures to incentivize water conservation. Further, consumers benefit from behind-the-meter leak detection solutions and detailed information about their water consumption which can lead to more efficient water use and lower water bills.

With a dense public carrier-grade LoRaWAN network in place to support AMI, municipalities and utilities can also rapidly deploy and expand their digital transformation initiatives to include applications like manhole monitoring, air quality monitoring, water quality monitoring, flood level monitoring, waste management, asset tracking, public safety, and more.

Connected City Playbook

Only with the right vision, plans, and resources in place will utility and municipal programs reach their full potential. When developing and executing a coordinated strategy, utility and municipal leaders should consider several key items related to their selection of network technology and the applications it is designed to support.

#1: Keeping Pace with Advanced Technologies

The expectations of businesses and citizens continue to evolve in parallel with rapid advancements in technology. Being prepared to evaluate and adopt new technologies and applications as they emerge will allow cities to better serve their citizens, improve quality of life, and address inefficiencies while saving money and resources.

#2: Deploying a Scalable Digital Infrastructure

At the core of any connected city must be a secure, efficient, and affordable network infrastructure. Investing in citywide network infrastructure, data platforms, and scalable systems to support the broadest range of applications is key to long-term success.

#3: Engage with a Proven Technology Ecosystem

A piecemeal approach to deploying connected city applications will prove ineffective in the long run. The best approach is to find the right mix of internal teams and external partners for what you are trying to achieve. Successful connected city projects will take advantage of a robust ecosystem of partners as well as modern and creative approaches to engagement, such as network-as-a-service models and revenue sharing.

Collaboration for Adoption

Utilities and municipalities should be open to sharing their experiences around new technology evaluation and adoption. For example, the adoption of LoRaWAN by water utilities for metering and improved service delivery is providing gas and electric utilities with foundational information for the development of new infrastructure monitoring and safety applications. Given the inherent overlap of the infrastructure and service delivery models, cross-sector collaboration has the potential to dramatically change the way utilities contribute to the success of national and global environmental, sustainability, and safety initiatives.

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  • Connectivity
  • LoRa
  • LoRaWAN
  • Sustainability
  • Utility Management

  • Connectivity
  • LoRa
  • LoRaWAN
  • Sustainability
  • Utility Management

参考译文
使用LoRaWAN解决计量基础设施
根据ASCE最近的数据,在美国,每两分钟就有一条总水管破裂,每天泄漏的水足以填满9000个游泳池。随着关键的基础设施像供水行业一样不断老化,公共事业和市政当局必须找到实用的解决方案,用现代材料和技术重建和增强这些系统。事实上,根据美国水工程协会(AWWA)的水务行业报告,更新和更换老化的供水和废水处理基础设施一直是美国水务公司在过去七年中面临的最大挑战。一个直接解决当今老化的水基础设施的创新例子是使用低功率广域网络(LPWANs),如LoRaWAN和低成本传感器,以支持新的先进计量基础设施(AMI)。AMI通常被狭义地看作是传统自动抄表(AMR)和抄表计费流程的一对一替代,后者需要驱动或手动抄表来确定用水量。然而,部署先进的计量基础设施与LPWAN连接,不仅完全自动化抄表,而且扩大了公用事业和市政当局实施各种水管理应用的能力,以解决更广泛的水资源保护和可持续发展问题。在评估AMI解决方案时,公用事业提供者必须为其连接的设备环境确定最适当的通信标准和网络使用模型。这一选择直接影响到公用事业公司可以实现的近期和长期运营灵活性和成本节约。它也有潜力创建公用事业和市政组织之间的合作以及跨部门公用事业合作的新模式。由于计量和基础设施监控应用程序具有相对较低的数据有效负载,很少需要低延迟,基于LoRaWAN标准的解决方案正在颠覆传统的水管理市场。LoRaWAN网络即服务(NaaS)交付模型和LoRaWAN传感器终端设备已被证明是传统封闭和专有系统的可行替代品,这些系统运营成本高,缺乏支持当前优先考虑的更广泛的保护和可持续发展倡议的路线图。通过为先进的计量基础设施采用公共管理的LoRaWAN网络服务,从头设计并具有支持数百万连接设备的能力,公用事业和市政当局现在可以高效和低成本地实施其数字转型计划。为先进的计量基础设施设计的LoRaWAN网络是最有能力的之一。它们密度高,容量大,安全可靠。一个LoRaWAN网关可以支持几十万个端点,只占整个网络容量的一小部分。此外,LoRaWAN协议在构建时将安全性作为网络架构的一个基本部分,这意味着它非常有能力处理公用事业和市政数据的安全无线传输需求。具有前瞻性的网络运营商还支持其他安全层,如MTE (MicroToken Exchange)和MKE (Managed Key Encryption),以支持关键基础设施和基本业务应用程序。随着自动化计量和无线数据收集传感器的进步,水务公司现在可以利用先进的计量基础设施,通过泄漏检测减少水的损失,通过加强水流监测简化账单,并实施新的费率结构,以鼓励节约用水。此外,消费者还可以从表后泄漏检测解决方案和有关其用水量的详细信息中获益,从而提高用水效率,降低水费。 有了密集的公共承运人级LoRaWAN网络来支持AMI,市政当局和公用事业公司也可以迅速部署和扩展其数字转型计划,以包括沙井监测、空气质量监测、水质监测、洪水水平监测、废物管理、资产跟踪、公共安全等应用程序。只有在正确的愿景、计划和资源到位的情况下,公用事业和市政项目才能充分发挥其潜力。在制定和执行一项协调的战略时,公用事业和市政领导应考虑与网络技术的选择及其所支持的应用相关的几个关键项目。企业和公民的期望随着技术的快速进步而不断发展。做好评估和采纳新技术和新应用的准备,将使城市更好地为市民服务,提高生活质量,在节约资金和资源的同时解决效率低下的问题。任何联网城市的核心都必须是一个安全、高效和负担得起的网络基础设施。投资于全市范围的网络基础设施、数据平台和可扩展系统,以支持最广泛的应用程序是长期成功的关键。从长远来看,零敲碎打地部署连接城市的应用程序是无效的。最好的方法是找到合适的内部团队和外部合作伙伴的组合,以达到你想要达到的目标。成功的互联城市项目将利用强大的合作伙伴生态系统,以及现代和创造性的参与方式,如网络即服务模式和收入分成。公用事业和市政当局应该开放地分享他们在新技术评估和采用方面的经验。例如,自来水公司采用LoRaWAN进行计量和改进服务提供,为煤气和电力公司提供了发展新的基础设施监测和安全应用的基本信息。鉴于基础设施和服务提供模式的固有重叠,跨部门合作有可能极大地改变公用事业公司为国家和全球环境、可持续性和安全举措的成功作出贡献的方式。
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