論説
How utilities can succeed in the construction boom
How utilities can succeed in the construction boom
Investments in electric utility infrastructure are at an all-time high in North America and Europe.
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論説
Investments in electric utility infrastructure are at an all-time high in North America and Europe.
Utilities in Europe and North America face the largest demand for new construction of electric generation and transmission facilities in more than a generation. They’ll need to relearn how to manage these projects and make the most of their resources to deliver.
Investments in electric utility infrastructure are at an all-time high in North America and Europe. These investments aim not only to replace and upgrade aging infrastructure, but also to meet new requirements to deliver more electricity from renewable energy sources like solar and wind. California, for example, will require 33% of its electricity to come from renewables by 2020; Germany aims for at least 35% by the same year.
Sources of renewable generation are often far from load centers, creating the need for new transmission infrastructure. Two examples of the most complex projects in the US are the $5 billion Competitive Renewable Energy Zones (CREZ), a group of transmission upgrade projects to significantly increase wind generation in Texas, and Sunrise Powerlink, a 117- mile transmission line bringing renewable energy from the Imperial Valley to San Diego (costing about $1.9 billion). In Europe, the list of power generation and transmission projects planned or underway is also growing. Companies in EU countries have committed to raising offshore wind capacity (mostly in the North Sea) from the current load of about 3 gigawatts to approximately 40 gigawatts by 2020. That has generated a pipeline of about 150 major projects, each worth an average of approximately 750 million euros, depending on project size. Many of these projects are being managed by large utilities, such as Dong Energy, RWE, Vattenfall, E.ON and Centrica.
Taken together, utility sector investment levels are expected to more than double in Europe, from the relatively steady levels of approximately 35 billion euros annually in the early 2000s to projected peaks of around 85 billion euros each year in the middle of this decade. Utilities in the US see a similar trend in which investment levels that were relatively steady in the early 2000s are projected to grow rapidly throughout the decade.
This dramatic increase in activity comes with unique challenges that utilities must confront in order to succeed:
Successfully managing through these challenges is an exercise requiring muscles not ordinarily flexed by utilities with siloed organizations. In our work with utility companies in Europe and North America, we have had the chance to observe and guide management teams and leaders on a wide variety of capital investment projects. The best way to efficiently deliver major projects is to build processes and approaches that ensure scarce resources are focused on the most critical projects, specify decision-making protocols, clearly articulate project progression from stage to stage and delineate team member roles—core project management skills.
Get these things right
Making efficient use of scarce and often inexperienced company resources takes focus and discipline, especially given the rapid pace required to meet the high expectations of customers and regulators. In our experience, applying the following disciplines across the full project lifecycle can make the difference between success and failure.
Unfortunately, these massive projects rarely follow the classic model whereby the cost is established in the early design phases. For example, years into a project, its scope may expand significantly, as regulators and resource agencies demand route changes or additional environmental mitigations. Rigorous scope and cost management, reviewed at each gate, are necessary, but they’re not enough. They must be paired with frequent stakeholder education to maintain support and avoid surprises.
At one utility company, there was a history of slow and contentious decision making, as departments lacked clear guidelines over who had decision rights. To break that pattern, the utility worked through a challenging evaluation in which representatives from each department clearly articulated what decisions were actually needed and what each department’s role was in those decisions. By applying the RAPID model, managers were able to ensure that the right departments had “the D” for the right decisions, while others felt comfortable knowing their voice was heard. The effort produced a decision playbook the company now uses as a reference for major projects. It defines a clear procedure to help remove emotions from important decisions.
As utilities confront the largest wave of infrastructure investments in a generation, they must enhance their project management capabilities in order to make efficient use of internal and external resources, all while maintaining a positive reputation with regulators and customers. Through our experiences advising utility clients, we have seen that clarifying project selection criteria, specifying decision-making protocol, detailing step-by-step project requirements and outlining team member roles will dramatically improve project team efficiency and help companies move projects more quickly through the pipeline.