As cities respond to climate change, opportunities for new energy infrastructure, such as hydrogen networks, are emerging. To support the transition of energy networks in urban areas, we help clients to develop the strategy and target required investments that will deliver decarbonisation. And, as energy generation becomes more diverse, we help clients move from analogue to digital systems to manage real-time data and make smarter decisions about energy dispatch and use.
Considering end uses
In much of the world, people have become used to energy being continually available – and to giving relatively little consideration to how much they consume for their buildings, industrial processes, transport and other uses. So, how do we change attitudes to demand and usage?
To support the transition to net zero, we help clients future-proof projects such as new and retrofit building developments to incorporate demand-responsive characteristics. We’ve worked for large tech companies, enabling them to generate, store and manage their own energy – being totally off-grid. Urban transport consumes significant quantities of energy. We’re working with cities including Los Angeles and Boston in the US and Manchester in the UK to electrify bus fleets. To do this, we look at the entire picture for urban energy planning – from optimal storage locations for grid connection to charging infrastructure along routes.
Focusing on resilience
Resilience is a key priority for urban energy. Our experience demonstrates that system resilience requires a balance between supply, demand and sustainability. Energy demand is no longer a passive end-point in a chain of energy supply - it is a dynamic, interactive part of an increasingly complex, interdependent and interactive whole system.
Extreme climatic events such as tornadoes, dry weather fires and flooding not only threaten our energy systems, but also pose downstream risks to the systems and societal cohesion on which secure energy provision depends. Cyber-attacks and ransomware are being targeted at energy systems every day. And as regulation and commercial models develop, they also have the potential to result in unintended resilience consequences.
We have a team of specialists who focus solely on urban energy resilience. We’ve worked with major cities around the world, including with partners such as the C40, to advise on the most locally relevant strategy for urban energy resilience .
Enabling prosumers
Our expertise supports energy operators, commercial organisations and cities with services that range from masterplanning to the electrical engineering design of microgrids. At this time of transition to net zero and continued expansion of cities, urban energy infrastructure is under increasing pressure and consumers are becoming prosumers as they seek to cut their energy use and their costs from data centres to tech companies. We work with a range of clients to explore what future solutions could look like such as off grid campuses using digital systems to manage energy usage, looking at effective storage solutions for renewable energy .
Whatever the urban energy solution or system, we focus above all else on one thing: creating a sustainable, resilient energy future for cities and their people.
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